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SA among top LGBTQ+ travel destinations in world – IOL

Are you in search of a destination that is LGBTQ+ friendly? You may want to consider South Africa on your bucket list.

According to MyDatingAdviser.com’s The Best Countries for LGBTQ+ Travel in 2021 report, South Africa has been named one of the best countries for LGBTQ+ travel.

The report aims to raise awareness of global attitudes for LGBTQ travellers- in time for Pride Month. The country ranked 11th with the LGBTQ+ travel index score of 86.2 (out of a possible 100 points).

MyDatingAdviser.com revealed that 54% of the South African public accepted homosexuality, according to a Global Attitudes & Trends survey by Pew Research. In terms of civil union rights, the country enforced same-sex marriage since 2006, and adoption rights have been legal since 2002. The Constitution bans all anti-gay discrimination.

The findings

To determine the most gay-friendly travel destinations, MyDatingAdviser compared 34 countries across eight key indicators of LGBTQ+-friendliness. It looked at categories like society acceptance towards homosexuality, sexual activity rights, civil union rights, marriage rights, adoption rights, military service rights, anti-discrimination laws and gender-identity laws.

Sweden claimed the top spot (98.2), followed by Netherlands(97.6), and Spain (89%). Other destinations featured on the list included France, UK, Germany, Canada, Australia, Brazil, Argentina, Italy, Israel, the US and Mexico.

Meanwhile, in a study by Small Business Prices this year, Luxembourg took the top spot as the world’s most friendly working holiday spot for LGBTQ couples. Small Business Prices researched cities around the world and assessed them based on their legalities around civil partnership, same-sex marriage, public acceptance and nightlife to work out the most LGBTQ+ friendly cities for workers.

Luxembourg claimed the top spot, thanks to its strong support of same-sex marriage, with 85% of residents in support of it.

Visit https://mydatingadviser.com/best-countries-for-lgbtq-travel/ for the full study.

Related video:

N.J. still doesn’t collect data on sexual orientation, gender identity. Here’s why that’s a problem. – NJ.com

LGBTQ+ people appear to be at a heightened risk for COVID in comparison to the general U.S. population, according to a study conducted by Rutgers University in 2020.

Specifically, individuals within the LGBTQ+ community including full-time workers, those not born in the United States, and cisgender gay men were discovered to be particularly vulnerable to the virus.

See How the Stars Are Celebrating Pride Month 2021 – Yahoo Entertainment

Axios

Calendar: Pride month events in Northwest Arkansas

June is Pride month, which celebrates LGBTQ+ people and commemorates the anniversary of the 1969 Stonewall Riots, when people rioted against a police raid at the Stonewall Inn in New York City.Get market news worthy of your time with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free.What’s happening: Several events are going on around NWA to celebrate Pride. Here are a few.June 5: You Belong — a community resource fair with food, music, and drag shows. The event will focus on how domestic violence affects the LGBTQ+ community, co-hosted by The Momentary and the NWA Women’s Shelter.12-5pm at The Momentary in BentonvilleTickets are free but requiredJune 12: Crystal Bridges’ Forest Concert Series — featuring Little Rock-based Dazz & Brie and Kansas City band True Lions.7pm. Tickets are $12 for adults and free for people under 18June 18: 21c Bentonville Pride Patio Party6pm at The Hive in BentonvilleTickets are free but requiredJune 20: Ozarks Drag Brunch: Advocates and Allies12pm at Fayetteville Town CenterTickets are $120 for a buffet of fourJune 24: NWA Trans March — this new event is a protest against the state’s recent passage of laws concerning transgender and gender non-conforming people, according to event host Northwest Arkansas Equality.Starts at 7pm at West Avenue and Spring Street in FayettevilleJune 25: Out in the Ozarks — comedy show featuring Matteo Lane8pm at Fayetteville Town Center Tickets are $260 for a table of fourJune 26: The 17th annual NWA Pride ParadeStarts at noon on Dickson Street in FayettevilleOf note: The usual NWA Pride festival in Fayetteville that includes street vendors will not happen this year because of COVID-19, according to Northwest Arkansas Equality.More from Axios: Sign up to get the latest market trends with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free

3 Ways to Grow Your LGBT-Owned Business Through NGLCC – Business 2 Community

As life slowly but surely begins to return to “normal,” LGBTQ entrepreneurs are faced with the prospect of an exciting summer — one full of new clients, customers, and business ventures.

Diving back into business as it was may seem overwhelming considering the way business has been conducted for the past year. But with the National LGBT Chamber of Commerce (NGLCC) at your side, you become part of a network that is here and ready to help at a moment’s notice.

Here are NGLCC’s tips for LGBTQ entrepreneurs to best prepare their business for what lies ahead this summer and beyond.

1. Get your NGLCC certification

NGLCC is the exclusive third-party certification body that verifies that eligible businesses are majority-owned by LGBTQ individuals. By obtaining the Certified LGBTBE® designation for your business, you can open up additional channels of contracting and procurement for yourself.

Certified LGBTBE® companies are routinely sought after by NGLCC Corporate Partners, who are looking to increase their spend with the LGBTQ business community through our internal, proprietary database. In turn, Certified LGBTBE® companies have access to hundreds of corporate representative and supplier diversity professional contacts. Through these contacts, companies can begin building strategic relationships and making preparations to meet face-to-face with them at NGLCC matchmaking and networking events, which are held throughout the year.

As business ramps up and becomes more competitive this summer, these contracting opportunities become all the more sought-after and valuable. Obtaining certification for your business gives you first pick at these opportunities, as well as allows you to participate in special professional development programs. Certified LGBTBE® companies are eligible for scholarship programs, mentorship and leadership training, and other business development tools!

2. Attend LGBTQ networking events

There is no better way to grow your business than to regularly interact with other LGBTBE owners. Our network of LGBTQ entrepreneurs proves that we all grow and learn more effectively with support from each other.

The best way to meet other Certified LGBTBE® owners and entrepreneurs is through NGLCC’s diverse array of events! Every month, we offer a variety of informational programming through our Webinar Wednesdays initiative, covering everything from workplace conflict, virtual work tips, PPP loans, and more. Through these events, LGBTQ professionals can connect and discuss what they’ve learned.

NGLCC also offers a monthly Sip & Pitch program. Sip & Pitch is a chance to informally present your LGBT-owned business to a panel of experts and your fellow business owners for positive, constructive feedback and new ideas. Although these are mock pitches, these programs are a tremendous opportunity for exposure for businesses of the NGLCC community. For the final hour of Sip & Pitch, all members of the LGBT and allied business community in the NGLCC network are welcome to pour a drink of their choice — with everything from coffee to cocktails welcome — and casually network with their fellow community members over video.

It is unclear how many events will be in person this summer, but NGLCC’s virtual programming is here to stay. Events like Webinar Wednesday, Sip & Pitch, and other community programs are beneficial opportunities to get to know our network and to meet fellow entrepreneurs as the scope of business continues to change with the pandemic.

3. Engage with platforms like Hello Alice

NGLCC partner Hello Alice helps entrepreneurs to grow their businesses with a variety of tools and personalized resources. Hello Alice is a digital platform that helps small business owners strategize around and build aspects of their businesses that they may need help with. It offers data insights and a personalized user experience to participants as they make their way further into the platform’s programming.

Hello Alice also offers a wide variety of online communities for business owners to directly interact with each other, get their business questions answered quickly, and collaborate. This programming is accomplished through a series of content partnerships with numerous field experts and partners that can help entrepreneurs continue to build. Some of these partners include Salesforce, Bumble, Chase, and many more.

Additionally, Hello Alice is the leading author of new reports on the intersection of identity and COVID-19 recovery for small businesses. NGLCC is proud to partner with Hello Alice in deepening their research with elements of our America’s LGBT Economy Report.

You can sign up for free at helloalice.com! Click here to read our conversation with the co-founder of Hello Alice, Elizabeth Gore.

About NGLCC

The NGLCC is the business voice of the LGBT community, the largest advocacy organization dedicated to expanding economic opportunities and advancements for LGBT people, and the exclusive certifying body for LGBT-owned businesses. At NGLCC, we recognize that a growth business needs not only a strong local network where business owners live and work, but also business certification and access to all the strategic growth opportunities offered by our national organization.

The LGBT business owners NGLCC represents generate over $1.7 trillion in economic impact, create jobs and innovate business solutions nationwide. Additionally, NGLCC is the leading public policy advocate working to include Certified LGBTBE® businesses in procurement opportunities at the federal, state and local level. NGLCC Global is expanding its reach to five continents, bridging economic opportunity and LGBTI human rights worldwide.


Kiss the Groom, Already! The Global Guide to Gay Marriage – metrosource.com

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Acceptance is a patchwork quilt. You can’t always count on it, but you can work to make it stronger, warmer, and more encompassing.

As Pride Month blankets us with a sense of inclusion, it’s important to understand how far our community expands. Same-sex marriage is a human right, yet it’s a fragile institution that is still in its infancy in many countries, including our own.

So, as we embark on summer travel and make further plans in our vacation lives as well as our love lives, let’s put our money where our laws are. LGBTQ+ nuptials are legal in 29 nations, but over 70 nations still punish homosexuality as a crime.

Navigating this unjust minefield can be treacherous, which is why we lean on organizations like the International LGBTQ+ Travel Association, or IGLTA.

In addition to being a valuable resource for hotspots and cool getaways, IGLTA recently updated their guide to gay marriage, and the page is a destination unto itself. After recapping recent and not-so-recent history in our struggles for equality, the site gives helpful pointers about staying safe and feeling fabulous.

But one of our favorite features on the page is its interactive rainbow flag. Simply click the pull-down menu to select the country of your choice. Once you have done so, watch as the red, orange, yellow, green, blue and purple stripes react.

The top tier of the graphic represents marriage equality, but that’s just the tip of the niceberg. One slot down, explore your nation’s sexual activity laws. After all, what good is same-sex marriage without the sex part?

The yellow stripe of the interactive rainbow illustrates gender identity protections and the green sliver covers anti-discrimination laws such as housing ordinances and employment opportunities. These are important considerations because once you’re wed, you may want to (gay gasp) actually settle down and make a life for yourself in a non-hostile locale.

Further down the flag, the situation gets spottier. Even progressive governments like The Netherlands fail to earn 100% when it comes to civil rights, liberties and social media sentiment. IGLTA is tracking adoption laws, blood donation regulations, conversion therapy practices, and online attitudes toward the LGBTQ’mmunity.

We recommend this comprehensive guide for all potential brides, grooms, and non-conforming spouses-to-be. While the thrill of international travel involves plenty of spontaneity, there are some elements of your trip you must plan judiciously. Queer adventurers don’t have the luxury of leaving certain details to chance, or else we may find ourselves in the midst of discrimination or incarceration.

And that’s no way to start a happy homo home life. Have a safe journey to your best self.

Last modified: June 2, 2021

Your Gay Agenda: What to Stream During Pride and When – Playbill.com

As theatres around the world celebrate Pride, the LGBTQIA+ community has an opportunity to see themselves represented on screen through a variety of digital presentations.

Whether it’s a Judy Garland cabaret or a Real Housewives send-up, a queer horror story or a virtual striptease, there’s something for everyone to enjoy.

Check out the full list of Pride events happening below. Looking for more? Check out Playbill’s live stream calendar here. All times are ET.

This American Wife (Available through June 6)
Catch the streaming on demand presentation of Michael Breslin and Patrick Foley’s latest virtual project under their Fake Friends banner. This multi-camera, live-streamed, dark comedy is an investigation into the obsession, idolization, and all-consuming-hunger sparked by the women of The Real Housewives franchise. In addition to the co-conceivers, the production will also feature Jakeem Dante Powell (Slave Play).

Queers (June 2 and 30)
Expanding beyond the original 2017 works (which will be re-released on BBC iPlayer at the start of the month), this Old Vic commission features two new pieces that expands the scope of focus on the LGBTQIA+ community.

Patriarch (June 2 at 2:30 PM ET)
Presented as part of The Great Plains Theater Conference, Patriarch is Francisco Mendoza’s first horror play, tackling the playwright’s Catholic upbringing through the story of a family dinner in 1962 Brooklyn that goes very wrong and results in the (possible) possession of their patriarch.

Williamstown Theatre Festival Gala_2020_HR
Michael R. Jackson Joseph Marzullo/WENN

The Tasting Room (June 8 at 7 PM)
Pulitzer Prize winner Michael R. Jackson (A Strange Loop, Vineyard Artist in Residence) and Tony recipient John Cameron Mitchell (Hedwig and the Angry Inch) discuss creating shows that changed the way LGBTQIA+ stories are represented on stage and a vast range of other topics in a no holds barred conversation presented by Vineyard Theatre.

Broadway Bares: Twerk From Home (June 20 at 9 PM)
Broadway will bare it all online again this year for the annual fundraiser for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS. From the front porch to the kitchen, the bedroom to the backyard, this virtual striptease will have the whole house swooning from all-new, highly produced virtual performances.

La MaMa Love Cabaret (June 22 at 7 PM)
Hosted by RuPaul’s Drag Race winner Sasha Velour, this special event celebrates intersectional queerness at a moment of historical change. This fundraiser brings together New York’s most illustrious queer artists with performers from abroad to envision a new future: a future that is full of love. The lineup includes Jasmine Rice LaBeija, Justin Vivian Bond, The Illustrious Pearl, and more from the international queer community.

One Thing I Want You to Know (June 23-25)
Presented by Irvington Theatre, this virtual program features over two dozen artists and advocates sharing messages of hope, calls to action, and deeply personal stories of love triumphing over fear. The lineup includes Jim Obergefell of Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court case that legalized same-sex marriage in the United States; 22-year active duty soldier and Iraq War veteran Sergeant First Class Freyja Eccles; the Boston Gay Mens Chorus; and two-time Emmy Award-winning NBC New York meteorologist Raphael Miranda.

New_Dramatists_Luncheon_2019_HR
George C. Wolfe Joseph Marzullo/WENN

I’m Still Here (June 23 8 PM)
A star-studded evening celebrating the 90th anniversary of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts’ Billy Rose Theatre Division and the 50th anniversary of its Theatre on Film and Tape Archive. Honoring Tony-winning and out director George C. Wolfe and the late Harold Prince, the evening features archival content of several Broadway productions preserved in the archive, including In the Heights and Sunset Boulevard.

The Queer Witch Conspiracy (June 23-24 at 8 PM)
A safe online space for LGBTQIA+ witches is desecrated by a controversy over cultural appropriation and burial rites. This Brandon Walker play, inspired by real events, is a mystical crime drama about how unidentified remains sparked a revolution regarding race, gender, and spirituality. The online production, presented by Seeing Place Theater, will include the concept of video journaling to get into the minds of the main characters.

Night of a Thousand Judys (June 24 at 8 PM)
Celebrate Judy Garland with tributes and songs from her legendary career as a movie star, recording artist, and stage performer. The all-star cabaret is written and hosted by Justin Sayre, with guest performances from Tony winner Alan Cumming; Tony nominees Mary Testa, Vivian Reed, and Sam Harris; Karen Mason, Jose Llana, Margo Seibert, Grace McLean, and more.

Jan Sport, Peppermint, and Shakina Nayfack
Jan Sport, Peppermint, and Shakina Nayfack

Glimmer of Light (June 24 at 8 PM)
Alex Newell, Ariana DeBose, Peppermint, Max Crumm, Jo Ellen Pellman, L Morgan Lee, and more join this celebration of queer youth and adults and their allies while supporting Born This Way Foundation’s initiatives to show that kindness is cool, to eliminate the stigma around mental health, and to validate emotions.

The Progress of Pride Spectacular (June 26 at 8 PM)
A virtual celebration for global digital LGBTQIA+ audiences and their allies offers musical performances, archival footage of past marches, and more. Hosted by Lea DeLaria, the lineup also includes BD Wong, Claybourne Elder, Eric Ulloa, Harvey Fierstein, Alex Newell, Jenn Colella, Kathryn Gallagher, and Nathan Lee Graham.

Man comes out as gay at 73, heartwarming video leaves netizens emotional – The Indian Express

Starting June, LGBTQIA+ communities around the world celebrate the ‘pride month’ to spread awareness about equality and the visibility of the group. The month is commemorated to honour those who have been advocating and fighting for equal rights for the community. Amid the celebration, a video of a man coming out as gay at the age of 73 is winning hears online.

The clip, which was originally shared on TikTok by user @fitxander, was reshared on the Instagram page ‘Nextdoor’ along with a caption that read, “Love and support always win.”

In the short clip, a man is seen putting up rainbow pride flags, one of the symbols of the LGBTQ movements. On top of the clip was a text that read, “My dad’s neighbour just came out as gay at 73.”

Watch the video here:

Since being shared online, the clip has gone viral on several social media platforms and prompted heartwarming reactions among netizens. “It’s never too late to be completely comfortable in your own skin! Love this! wrote a user, while another comment read, “How wonderful. A true friend.”

US Embassy to Vatican flies LGBT ‘Pride’ flag for month of June – The Catholic Telegraph

Washington D.C., Jun 1, 2021 / 09:15 am

The U.S. Embassy to the Holy See announced on Tuesday, June 1, that it was displaying the rainbow LGBT “Pride” flag for the month of June, which is celebrated as LGBT “Pride” month.

“The United States respects the dignity and equality of LGBTQI+ people. LGBTQI+ rights are human rights,” the embassy stated on Twitter.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken earlier this year announced that U.S. embassies and consulates around the world could fly the “Pride” flag on the same flagpole as the American flag, during “Pride season.”

The authorization to fly the flag – which was not a mandate – was given ahead of May 17, observed as the international day against homophobia, transphobia, and biphobia. June, during which embassies can also fly the “Pride” flag on the external flagpole, is celebrated as “Pride” month by people identifying as LGBT.

Under the Trump administration, U.S. diplomatic outposts were reportedly prohibited from flying the rainbow flag from embassy flagpoles, and had to obtain special permission to do so. They were allowed to display the flag inside buildings.

Antony Blinken’s cable on “Pride” flags, first reported by Foreign Policy magazine in April, advised that diplomatic posts in certain countries should avoid flying the rainbow flag if doing so would create a backlash.

Also on Tuesday, President Joe Biden, the second Catholic president in U.S. history, issued a statement on June 1 for “Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Pride Month, 2021.”

“Pride is both a jubilant communal celebration of visibility and a personal celebration of self-worth and dignity,” Biden stated.

He praised recent Supreme Court decisions that recognized a legal right to same-sex marriage in Obergefell v. Hodges, and which ruled that federal civil rights protections against sex discrimination in the workplace also extended to sexual orientation and gender identity, in Bostock v. Clayton County.

Biden also called on Congress to pass the Equality Act, legislation which establishes sexual orientation and gender identity as protected classes in federal civil rights law alongside race and sex.

The U.S. bishops’ conference (USCCB) has warned that despite the bill’s aims of combatting discrimination, it would discriminate against people of faith who are opposed to the redefinition of marriage and transgenderism.

The USCCB has warned that the bill, by mandating access to public accommodations based on one’s sexual orientation or gender identity, could be used to pressure churches to “host functions that violate their beliefs.” Religious adoption agencies could be forced to match children with same-sex couples, and faith-based women’s shelters could be required to house biological males identifying as transgender females.

The legislation also overrides religious freedom claims made under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

In his statement, Biden also touted his Jan. 20 executive order that stated his administration’s policy of interpreting civil rights protections to include sexual orientation and gender identity.

He noted his administration’s implementation of that order through agency rules, such as the Department of Education interpreting Title IX to protect sexual orientation and gender identity, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development requiring federally-funded shelters to accept clients based on gender identity and not their birth sex.

During the Obama administration, the U.S. Embassy to the Holy See made pro-LGBT social media posts on the international day against homophobia, transphobia, and biphobia and during “Pride” month, in 2017, 2014, and in 2011.

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Vilnius police launch probe after LGBT crossing is painted over – Euronews

Police in the Lithuania capital have launched an investigation after several people were filmed painting over a rainbow-coloured crossing.

The incident took place on May 31. In a video posted on Facebook, four people can be seen spray painting over the rainbow-coloured crossing and disrupting traffic.

Lithuanian MP Tomas Raskevičius, shared the video, writing: “These people are terrorists in plain sight.”

Police in Vilnius confirmed to Euronews that they have “initiated two administrative proceedings for a minor violation of public order.”

“While the investigation is ongoing, we cannot comment further on its details,” they added.

Contacted by Euronews, the city council said they would repaint the rainbow in the same area.

“We will bill the people who painted it black. Vilnius loves everybody, and supports everybody,” they said in a statement.

The incident came just a day before the start of Pride Month, celebrated globally throughout June, and days after a bill to legalise same-sex partnerships in the small Baltic country failed to clear its first parliamentary hurdle.

The bill, which aims to grant LBGT+ couples access to certain benefits including joint ownership of property and inheritance rights, was met by protests with thousands taking part in a “Great Family Defence March” in Vilnius earlier that month.

According to the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA), the latest incident in Vilnius is part of a pattern of increased “hostility and hate we are witnessing across Europe.”

“Fifty-five per cent of Lithuanian LGBTI respondents have been discriminated against in the past 12 months, the highest rate in the EU, according to the Fundamental Rights Agency survey of 2020. In our Annual Review we reported too cases of bias-motivated speech and language last year,” ILGA Advocacy Director Katrin Hugendube, told Euronews.

“Authorities in Lithuania and elsewhere must stand strong and protect LGBTI people from hate. We hope that the rainbow will be repainted soon and that authorities in Vilnius will prevent this act of violence from happening again,” she added.

Art of Feeling Gay – Gulfport Gabber

A colorful piece of abstract art.
“Springy and Gay.” “I explore where I want it to go, what I want the viewer to feel even though we all have our own history,” said artist Amy Howell. Photo courtesy of Amy Howell.

After a life of living across the country, painting, creating and working as a pastry chef, 63-year-old Amy Howell has settled in Gulfport to recreate her life again. 

Her colorful canvases, textured with cemented ceramic and painted almost manically, differ depending on her state of mind. 

“I feel like I’m putting together a puzzle. It’s best when I let it flow and don’t overthink it,” Howell said. “It chooses me.” 

Howell’s work is inspired by African and Native American work, with geometric shapes and spiritual storytelling in the blurred lines. 

Of course, there’s a bit of Jackson Pollock in there, with bold colors and spontaneous, overlapping splashes. 

Titles like “Springy and Gay,” and “Going Against the Tide” do not define the work as much as her emotions when she’s holding the paintbrush. 

“That’s the feeling I was feeling when I was just feeling gay,” Howell says about “Springy and Gay.” 

A Change 

A colorful piece of abstract art.
“Boats Behind Bamboo.” Photo courtesy of Amy Howell.

Originally from New Jersey, Howell studied graphic design at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. It was there that she took her first oil painting class and never stopped putting her feelings on canvas. 

“I knew I didn’t want to stay in the Midwest, so I did some exploring in my twenties,” Howell said. “I fell in love with several cities.” 

She lived in Colorado and Oregon before falling in love and moving to Provincetown, Massachusetts, a small Cape Cod art town, with her wife.  

Howell’s rolling stone settled in Gulfport in 2019, where her paint runs a little more colorfully. 

“I moved to Provincetown when I couldn’t stop dreaming about it,” Howell said. “But there were a lot of gray days, and I knew I didn’t want to retire there. It wasn’t as diverse as Gulfport; there wasn’t as much going on.”

A colorful piece of abstract art.
“Bedazzled.” Photo courtesy of Amy Howell.

Originally, the New Jersey native painted representational art from nature, and worked with photography. 

“With abstract there is more freedom,” Howell said. “All those shapes and colors and textures stir different sensations.” 

Through last year’s shutdowns, her creations were gloomier, with dull colors and heavy drips down heavily textured surfaces. 

“Lately I wanted the series to be more uplifting. For a while my paintings were heavy, between the racial upheaval and the election,” Howell said. “I’ve been trying to focus on humanity and the human spirit.” 

 See For Yourself 

Howell will participate in Gulfport’s monthly First Friday Art Walk on June 4. You can also see her work at Brenda McMahon Ceramics & Gallery through June, where she will be displaying specific Pride pieces. 

“We rarely see abstracts, and her take is bright and happy, dreamy and captivating,” said McMahon. 

A colorful piece of abstract art.
“Going Against the Tide.” Photo courtesy of Amy Howell.

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Southern Arizona VA celebrates LGBT Pride year-round – VAntage Point – VAntage Point Blog

Southern Arizona VA (SAVAHCS) takes Pride in Serving All Who Served. For employees, celebrating the LGBT and related identities community is a year-round affair.

The Southern Arizona VA courtyard at dawn. On the grass are paper flowers made by VA staff. They represent each transgender person killed in the U.S. in 2019.

From the Health Fair, June Pride Month specific events and every November, they hold a ceremony for Transgender Day of Remembrance.

VA is dedicated to promoting diversity, equality and inclusion. We strive for the deepest roots of inclusion and diversity within VA. We facilitate bringing about understanding, education and awareness to remove barriers for the VA LGBT and related identities community.

The facility encompasses this motto early upon hire. At orientation, the hospital welcomes, supports and educates all new employees about VA directives of diversity and inclusivity.

Topics include supporting and promoting VA allies to our lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and related identities employees and Veterans. Additionally, new employees are provided with Pride lapel pins that say, “We Serve ALL Who Served,” and “Safe Zone” stickers.

We have a robust LGBT Committee at our facility including an LGBT Veteran Care coordinator, physicians, pharmacy, social work, nursing, support staff and administration representatives from inpatient and outpatient areas.

Links to information and services

You can find your local facility’s LGBT Veteran Care Coordinator to learn more about your facility’s events, programs, and available health care services or visit Patient Care Services LGBT Health program office for more information.

Southern Arizona VA has a Transgender/Gender Diverse Clinic led by Dr. Jennifer Flynn. She and her team work on issues such as events, policies for transgender and gender diverse care, and enhancing processes for better transgender care within the facility.

Dr. Flynn helped develop a national training series titled, “Care for Transgender and Gender Diverse Veterans in VHA.” She also participates in numerous webinars on transgender care, including the VA Women’s Health Inter-Professional Monthly Webinar series.

VA employees participate in a Transgender Day of Remembrance event.

Her team also holds monthly support group video calls to adapt to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Leading from the front

Due to Covid-19, leadership turned their focus on innovative ways to continue to support the facility’s LGBT program. They hosted a virtual USO-style drag show featuring local community drag kings and queens.

They submitted virtual performances for Tucson’s virtual Pride celebration that incorporated a socially distanced Pride photo booth and an office Pride decoration contest.

Read, follow and view photos about the festivities of SAVAHCS’s past events on the Facebook page.

At VA, we proudly lead the effort to build a diverse workforce and cultivate an inclusive work environment.

We do this by developing and implementing policies and programs that promote diversity and inclusion in our workplace as we strive to ensure that VA’s workforce is drawn from the broadest segments of society.

This ensures that it is poised to meet the present and future needs of our Nation’s Veterans, their families and beneficiaries. All Veterans are welcome at VA, including those who have minoritized sexual or gender identities.

Veterans who have minoritized sexual or gender identities have faced stigma and discrimination, which can affect health. As a health care institution, we need to work to make sure that Veterans with LGBT and related identities know that they are welcome at VA.

Find your local facility’s LGBT Veteran Care Coordinator.

Visit Patient Care Services LGBT Health program office for more information on available health care services, factsheets, online training, policies, research and resources.


Patrick Powers-Lake is the LGBT Veteran care coordinator and patient safety manager for the Southern Arizona VA.

As NFL embraces LGBTQ Pride, some fans threaten boycotts – Outsports

The NFL, WNBA, MLS and so many others across sports kicked off Pride Month by changing social-media avatars to rainbow colors. The Minnesota Vikings changed their avatar too, as the San Francisco 49ers announced a virtual Pride conversation. Pride month has come to sports.

The NFL went as far as sharing all of its teams logos in rainbow colors as well:

While many fans have endorsed the display of support for the LGBTQ community with many thousands of likes and shares, others have resorted to some old tropes pushing back against the LGBTQ community with threats of boycotts and other annoyed expressions.

A common theme amongst the naysayers on the NFL’s Instagram post was questioning what Pride has to do with football. This comment got over 15k likes:

Former NFL player Ryan O’Callaghan, who played three seasons with the New England Patriots and Kansas City Chiefs, thinks supporting Pride has everything to do with the NFL.

“The response shows people’s lack of understand and ignorance,” he said. “I’m glad the NFL does it. Small gestures like that add up.”

He should know. Throughout his NFL career and time playing football at Cal, O’Callaghan hid he was gay, assuming everyone in football would reject him if they knew. He didn’t think he could ever live as an out gay man. He now knows otherwise.

Another popular meme has been pointing out that another team’s fans are so gay (because being gay is bad) that they must love Pride month:

Comments like that weren’t just pointed at the Philadelphia Eagles — It seems at least somebody from most teams’ fan bases got in on that incredibly “original” act.

This creative fan turned himself into a “dislike button” and got over 10k “likes”… or dislikes, whatever the case may be:

Other fans said they would leave their NFL fandom behind, at least temporarily during Pride month, as a form of boycott:

Of course, fans like this almost never leave after their toothless threats.

The reactions haven’t sat well with former Dallas Cowboys linebacker Jeff Rohrer.

“It’s a shame for people to reject the NFL for embracing the gay community,” Rohrer said. “The gay community is a huge supporter of all sports, there are a lot of gay athletes in every sport, football being one of them. It makes no sense for people to be upset at the league for showing some pride and respect for the ex-players in the NFL who are gay.”

Rohrer came out publicly in 2018 shortly before marrying his husband, skin and beauty expert Joshua Ross.

O’Callaghan was quick to point out that, while it’s important to continue to point to corners of homophobic nonsense in sports, this doesn’t mean a gay NFL player would be rejected by the league, its teams or most fans.

“A lot of people are going to say this is proof pro sports aren’t ready for gay athletes, but I think it’s proof the NFL is ready,” O’Callaghan said. “It’s just some fans who aren’t. And out of millions and millions of people who follow the NFL’s Instagram, how many negative comments are on there? It’s a pretty small percentage.

“But that’s still a lot of people who have some learning to do.”

This isn’t the first time we’ve seen negative reactions to sports’ support of the LGBTQ community. Smatterings of this kind of rejection are part of the path toward inclusion. Most recently, social media lit up with praise for the Texas Rangers for their refusal to host a Pride Night this season.

Some argue that sports teams and leagues should keep their support of Pride out of the public view because “politics don’t belong in sports.” Even if you think that, Rohrer argues supporting the LGBTQ community isn’t political.

“It’s not left, it’s not right, it’s humanity,” Rohrer said. “And we’re all part of humanity and we all need to be respected. Society is evolving, and anything we can do to move that forward is important to all of us regardless of race, color, creed and sexuality.”

Why are U.S. states banning transgender women from sport? – Reuters

(Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Florida has become the largest U.S. state to ban transgender women and girls from competing in women’s sport, part of a nationwide Republican drive to use local laws to challenge President Joe Biden’s push for greater LGBT+ inclusion.

WHAT’S AT STAKE?

In March 2020, Idaho became the first state to ban trans women and girls from women’s sports leagues in schools and colleges, setting off a trend that swept more than 30 other state legislatures.

That landmark law is now suspended, after a court challenge deemed it discriminatory.

This year, Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, Montana, Tennessee, West Virginia and Florida passed similar legislation and South Dakota’s governor has signed an executive order supporting a sports ban. All have Republican governors.

In May, the LGBT+ advocacy group Human Rights Campaign pronounced 2021 the “worst year” for bills challenging gay and transgender rights in U.S. states.

It plans to challenge the Florida law.

More than 250 LGBT+ rights-related bills were introduced in state legislatures this year, it said, with 18 “anti-LGBTQ” bills then signed into law, topping the previous record of 15 set in 2015.

WHY NOW?

On Biden’s first day in office, he signed an executive order that banned discrimination based on gender identity in bathrooms, changing rooms and school sports – a move opposed by many Republicans.

“The President believes that trans rights are human rights, and that no one should be discriminated on the basis of sex,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in March.

Republicans have spoken out against trans girls competing in girls’ sport, saying they have an unfair physical advantage over other competitors, amid a fierce culture war between LGBT+ activists and social conservatives.

“I can tell you this: in Florida, girls are going to play girls’ sports and boys are going to play boys’ sports,” Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said on Tuesday where he signed the bill.

“We are going to go based off biology, not based off ideology when we are doing sports.”

WHAT ARE THE CURRENT RULES?

School policies for trans athletes vary, but are usually set by bodies that govern athletics, rather than state laws.

Several states have no policies at all.

The National Collegiate Athletic Association, which runs inter-college sport, says trans women must suppress their testosterone for at least a year before competing as women.

Trans men cannot compete with women once they start taking testosterone, NCAA rules state.

On the global stage, International Olympic Committee guidelines advise sporting bodies to allow trans women athletes to compete if their testosterone levels remain below a certain level for at least a year. Trans men face no restrictions.

WHAT DO TRANS ACTIVISTS SAY?

LGBT+ activists say the sports bills are discriminatory, and dispute claims of a physical advantage.

Gillian Branstetter, a trans advocate and spokeswoman for the National Women’s Law Center, said trans athletes have not consistently outperformed other female athletes in the 16 U.S. states that have trans-inclusive high school policies.

“There’s not been the abolition of women’s sport. The nightmarish rhetoric (of) the people proposing these bills simply hasn’t come to fruition,” she said.

Chris Mosier, a triathlete and the first trans man to represent the United States internationally, said the current debate was damaging for all trans people.

“Telling transgender and non-binary youth that they are not valid and not worthy of having the same experiences as their peers not only negatively impacts them – it also impacts the way the rest of the country treats transgender people,” he said.

“These are very dangerous bills that are attempting to serve as an entry point to larger scale discrimination,” he said.

WHAT DO SCIENTISTS SAY?

The muscular advantage enjoyed by trans women only falls by about 5% after a year of testosterone suppressing treatment, according to a review of existing studies by the University of Manchester and Sweden’s Karolinska Institute.

Britain’s Loughborough University found that hormone therapy reduced trans women’s haemoglobin levels – which affects endurance – to equal that of non-trans women within four months.

But strength, lean body mass and muscle area remained higher after three years of medication to block testosterone, it said.

Tommy Lundberg, who co-authored the first study, said male athletes gain their 30% muscular advantages during puberty, but there are no studies of trans adolescents who may take puberty blockers or cross-sex hormones before puberty finishes.

Reporting by Rachel Savage @rachelmsavage; Additional Reporting by Sydney Bauer; Editing by Lyndsay Griffiths and Katy Migiro. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit news.trust.org

Target unveils Pride assortment now available in all of its stores – Minneapolis Star Tribune

Target for the first time this year will offer its Pride month collection at all of its stores.

The merchandise celebrating the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community also is broader than in years past, including new home items such as colorful tableware and pillows.

It’s the 10th year Target has offered exclusive Pride products at its stores. This year’s collection includes more than 150 products in apparel and pet items created by company designers in partnership with the Minneapolis retailer’s Pride+ Business Council and other employee resource groups.

Many of the employees who helped curate the assortment have connections to the LGBT community.

With a donation of $100,000, Target also has continued to support GLSEN, an organization focused on preventing the bullying and harassment of LGBT youth and encourage inclusion in schools.

Pride Month officially starts in June with celebrations happening across the country. Several of the Twin Cities Pride Festival events will be in person this year. They are spread across several dates in June and July. Last year, the events were held virtually due to COVID-19 restrictions.

Biden seeks to ramp up money to beat HIV/AIDS in budget request – Washington Blade

Some owners of D.C. gay bars have said Mayor Muriel Bowser’s announcement on May 10 that the city’s restaurants and bars could resume operations at full capacity and return to pre-pandemic operating hours on May 21 caught them by surprise.

After several months of business shutdowns followed by a partial reopening with strict limits of only 25 percent of the normal number of customers inside bars and restaurants, a ban on standing in bars or being served while sitting at a barstool, the mayor’s reopening order left many bars and restaurants short on servers and bartenders.

But nearly everyone associated with D.C. gay bars who spoke with the Washington Blade — including owners, employees, and customers — have said they were ecstatic to see a full reopening after more than a year of COVID-related restrictions and hardship.

“We didn’t really open at a 100 percent capacity,” said John Guggenmos, co-owner of the D.C. gay bars Trade and Number 9, immediately after Mayor Bowser issued her full reopening order. Like other bar owners, Guggenmos said Trade and Number 9 had to bring back employees who had to be let go due to the shutdowns and operating restrictions over the past year.

“But you know, seeing people again, hearing the stories of some of the struggles they went through, and our customers just talking to each other and saying how glad they are to be back gave us a sense of our community and how much we are more than just four walls and some chairs and music,” Guggenmos said.

Dito Sevilla, who works as bar manager at the 17th Street restaurant Floriana, and as longtime host of the restaurant’s lower-level space known as Dito’s Bar, said the May 21 lifting of COVID restrictions has returned business to pre-pandemic levels.

“We were not fully staffed on day one either,” Sevilla told the Blade. “Everyone had to work a little extra,” he said. “And that was OK with them because they had gone without working for so long that working some extra shifts that week wasn’t going to hurt anyone. They were thrilled to do it.”

Doug Schantz, owner of the U Street, N.W. gay sports bar Nellie’s, said he too was caught off guard by the short advance notice of the mayor’s May 21 full reopening of restaurants and bars but like other bar owners said he is pleased that the full reopening has come to D.C.

He said Nellie’s put in place a “soft” reopening on May 21, with operations limited to his second-floor space that has a roof deck and he continued to close at midnight instead of the resumption to normal closing times with the mayor’s order at 2 a.m. on weekdays and 3 a.m. on weekends.

Schantz said he timed his full reopening to take place this weekend to coincide with the kickoff of the city’s LGBTQ Pride events. And by July 1, he said, Nellie’s will resume its popular drag brunch.

“We’re taking it one step at a time, but so many people were happy to be back,” he said. “They want to be back to normal.”

David Perruzza, owner of the Adams Morgan gay sports bar Pitchers and its adjoining lesbian bar A League of Her Own, said he and his regular customers, many of whom continued to show up at the two bars during the height of the pandemic restrictions, are delighted over the full reopening. Like several of the other bar owners, Perruzza said he will continue to operate outdoor seating under the “streetery” program the city established when indoor seating was initially banned and later resumed at just 25 percent capacity.

One COVID-related rule remaining in place for bars and restaurants, which is expected to be lifted soon, is the requirement that bars and restaurants obtain a name and phone number for at least one person entering as part of a group and for each individual entering for contact tracing purposes in the event someone tests positive for COVID on the day the customer was present. The city’s Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration, which initiated the requirement during the height of the pandemic, was expected to end the requirement in the next few weeks, according to sources familiar with ABRA.

In addition to the full reopening of bars and restaurants on May 21, the city has cleared the way for the full resumption of large indoor and outdoor events on June 11, including parades and sports stadiums. That development has prompted D.C.’s Capital Pride Alliance, the group that organizes the city’s LGBTQ Pride events, to add to this week’s Pride events a June 12 Pride Walk, which will begin at Dupont Circle at noon and travel to Logan Circle before heading south to Freedom Plaza, where a rally will take place.

“The excitement has been palpable since bars and restaurants in D.C. recently reopened at full capacity and without limit or activity restrictions,” said Mark Lee, coordinator of the D.C. Nightlife Council, a local trade association representing bars, restaurants, and nightclubs.

“The enthusiasm is especially evident at LGBT venues, with long lines common after a long period of shutdowns and slowdowns,” Lee said. “The celebration will expand on June 11 when nightclub-licensed dance clubs fully reopen, and large music venues begin hosting tour acts and special shows in the coming days.”

But Lee said a “flip side” to the reopening celebrations is the reality that many bars, restaurants, and nightclubs must grapple with a massive debt burden of back-rent owed to landlords that threatens their survival.

Lee and others point out that the forced shutdowns and capacity restrictions that these mostly small businesses have faced during the pandemic resulted in a drastic reduction in revenue that forced them to rely on local D.C. and federal COVID moratoriums on evictions for commercial and residential tenants. With the moratoriums ending, the businesses must now repay the back rent owed that Lee says often exceeds $100,000 or more.

“That’s why the D.C. Nightlife Council and the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington are urging Mayor Bowser and the D.C. Council to utilize a small portion of the city’s federal relief monies to create a Rent Relief Fund for local establishments facing unsustainable past-due lease obligations,” Lee said.

Perruzza said that in addition to facing back rent payments related to the pandemic, he and other bar and restaurant owners had to pay D.C. property taxes under their lease agreements at a time when their revenue was greatly suppressed from the pandemic. He said he believes he will be able to cope with the rental payoff, but the relief fund proposed by Lee and others would be immensely helpful for his and other struggling small businesses.

Bowser and members of the D.C. Council have said they were considering the relief proposal.

“We’re thankful for the support the community showed throughout the pandemic and the eagerness to want to get back to us,” said Guggenmos of Trade and Number 9. “We are thrilled and it’s great seeing everyone, but it doesn’t mean the sleepless nights are over,” he said in referring to the rental debt and other COVID-related expenses that his clubs continue to face.

Among the other D.C. gay bars whose representatives or customers said they are pleased over the reopening at full capacity include Uproar, Dirty Goose, JR.’s, Larry’s Lounge, Window’s, Annie’s Paramount Steakhouse, Duplex Diner, and Freddie’s Beach Bar in Arlington, Va.

Lee said the downtown D.C. nightclub Sound Check at 1420 K St., N.W., was scheduled to resume its weekly Avalon Saturday “gay” nights on June 12. Before being put on hold during the pandemic, the event featured drag shows and dancing.