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AAA: Summer travel to rebound starting with Memorial Day weekend – Yahoo News

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The Daily Beast

This Trumpy Anti-Trafficking Group Relies on Psychic for Tips

Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast/GettyA tough-talking anti-human-trafficking organization with ties to former President Donald Trump relied on a tip from a psychic for at least one of its failed “raids” in Haiti, according to reporters who have tracked the group.“They have defended the use of psychics and made it sound like something that law enforcement does all the time, which they might do, but that doesn’t make it a good idea,” Vice senior staff writer Anna Merlan said on the latest episode of The Daily Beast’s Fever Dreams podcast.The anti-trafficking group Operation Underground Railroad and its founder, Tim Ballard, have become stars on the right with their claims of using former soldiers to raid brothels and rescue children around the world. Ballard landed a position on a Trump administration panel aimed at fighting human trafficking, and his group has been backed by sports celebrities like baseball player Bryce Harper and Pittsburgh Steelers Coach Mike Tomlin, as well as motivational speaker Tony Robbins and talk-radio host Glenn Beck.“One of the reasons they’ve been effective and successful is the way they’ve brought in people from sports and other kinds of celebrities to aid in their cause,” Vice features editor Tim Marchman, who has tracked the group along with Merlan, said.But Merlan and Marchman’s reporting has poked a number of holes in the story Ballard tells about his group. Ballard has also flirted with conspiracy theorists, appearing at a conference popular with QAnon followers and shouting out an insane conspiracy theory positing that children were sex-trafficked on the furniture website Wayfair. Former Passion of the Christ star Jim Caviezel, who is set to play Ballard in a movie, has cited a separate conspiracy theory about children being tortured for their “adrenochrome” as his inspiration.“Jim Caviezel immediately started talking about the adrenochroming of children and stated outright that children were being tortured and murdered for their adrenochrome by elites or other evildoers,” Merlan said. “[He] also sort of indicated that Ballard had been on the one who told him about these things.”‘Seinfeld’ Writer: Kramer Would Be a ‘Believer in QAnon’Also on the agenda for this week’s episode, The Daily Beast’s Asawin Suebsaeng and Will Sommer talk about a growing feud between pro-Trump cable channels One America News and Newsmax, as well the latest updates on Arizona’s shambolic ballot recount and right-wing UFO enthusiasts convinced that new revelations about possible alien visitors are just another ruse from the “deep state.”Listen, and subscribe, to Fever Dreams on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Stitcher.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.

Baby survives after pregnant woman dies from gunshot wound, Baytown police say – Toys Matrix

BAYTOWN, Texas – A baby survived after a 23-year-old woman who had been pregnant with the child died from a gunshot wound to the head Monday in Baytown, officials said.

“When I came out here and I saw them take a gurney in there I was like, ‘Hmm, no,’ I had to go inside because I knew they were going to bring someone out and it was a woman and she was about 7 months pregnant and she was showing,” said the pregnant woman’s neighbor, Ronni Moore.

Baytown police said the woman — identified as Dominique Million — was taken to Memorial Hermann via Life Flight, but succumbed to her injuries and the baby girl she was carrying was successfully delivered via c-section. The baby is recovering at Texas Children’s Hospital.

Police are searching for three people of interest in the Tuesday shooting.

The incident happened around 6:30 p.m. Monday at the Brixton Apartments on Garth Road near Park Street, according to the Baytown Police Department.

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Police said they responded to a call about shots being fired at the apartment complex. Previously investigators said people inside two vehicles were involved in an exchange of gunfire and that one of bullets entered a nearby apartment, striking Million in the head as she was inside her apartment. Detectives say they learned that a 20-year-old man was also shot in the back as he stood outside the apartment. He was taken to Memorial-Hermann Hospital and underwent a successful surgery.

Investigators later determined that Million’s apartment was targeted, but do not know if she was the intended target, according to Baytown detectives.

A neighbor told KPRC 2 that he saw two men who also live at the home in the front yard. Those men had an argument with a third man.

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‘They’re turning the frogs gay!’ Twitter reacts to Kellogg’s gay pride cereal that teaches children to choose their own pronouns – RT

Corporate America’s alliance with LGBT activism has been brought to the breakfast table with the rollout of a new Kellogg’s gay pride cereal that encourages children to choose their own pronouns.

The “Together With Pride” cereal, which went on sale in stores across the US last week, features rainbow-colored hearts “dusted with edible glitter,” according to Kellogg Co. It was produced in collaboration with the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD). Kellogg’s is donating $3 to the activist group for each box purchased when buyers upload their receipts through a special promotion.

Also on rt.com Toying with identity? Lego unveils ‘LGBTQIA+’ rainbow-themed set designed to ‘celebrate everyone’

Together With Pride will celebrate that “no matter who you are, who you love or what pronouns you use, you are too awesome to fit into a box,” Kellogg said. GLAAD president Sarah Kate Ellis added that the cereal will create opportunities for families to “have conversations about the importance of acceptance, compassion and understanding,” especially regarding “LGBTQ+” children.

The campaign was mocked on social media, with many users questioning what had become of their favorite Kellogg cartoon characters, such as “Dig’em Frog,” the mascot for Honey Smacks. “They’re turning the frogs gay,” said a commenter with the account name “Alex Jones was right.” The post alluded to Jones, a right-wing radio host who was ridiculed for a rant in which he claimed that frogs were being turned gay by chemicals in the water.

Openly gay talk show host Dave Rubin quipped: “I had no idea that Tony the Tiger and Toucan Sam were dating.”

Toucan Sam, the mascot for Froot Loops, is featured on the side of the Together with Pride box, where fans can fill in their own pronouns. The opening tab at the top of the box says, “Lift here to open your heart.” Below that is another label for filling in pronouns.

Also on rt.com ‘Shameful fearmongering’? LGBTQ+ activists blast 60 Minutes for segment on trans youths featuring people who have detransitioned

The Kellogg-GLAAD venture is one in a long line of gay-themed marketing ploys that major corporations are deploying as they gear up virtue-signaling campaigns for Pride Month in June. For instance, Mars Inc. has introduced a Pride-themed version of its Skittles candy, with the colors removed from its rainbow packaging and a note saying, “Only one rainbow matters during Pride.” And Danish toymaker Lego introduced a buildable model featuring a rainbow backdrop and 11 figurines, each with their own hair style, to match each color.

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Spicy Piccies Show Tessa Thompson Smooching A Hot Sydney Model At Taika Waititi’s Epic Shindig – Pedestrian TV

The Thor: Love & Thunder team weren’t kidding when they said Love & Thunder because their stint Down Under has been a non-stop love (and thunder) fest. After Tessa Thompson, Taika Waititi and Rita Ora were papped embracing each other in a three-way smooch, Tessa has now been spotted macking on with one half of Sydney model twins, Zac Stenmark.

Sneaky photogs spotted the Thor: Love and Thunder star kissing the Aussie model as they left Taika Waititi’s after party on Sunday.

E! News reports that she and Zac were “just two of the many guests who partied the night away at Taika’s home in the suburbs.”

Have a peek at the piccies here.

It’s not clear how the pair met, but I’ve heard whispers that there’s been loads of A-list parties in Sydney lately so the pair were bound to meet one another and also, where was my invite, huh?

You’ll recognise the 29-year-old brothers as mentors on Australia’s Next Top Model (RIP), and have been featured in ad campaigns for numerous high end brands, including Ralph Lauren and Tom Ford.

You’ll also recognise them for their god-like faces and glorious abs, too, I’m sure:

Tessa Thompson relocated to Sydney not too long ago, along with the rest of the Thor: Love & Thunder cast, to film the latest instalment of the Thor movies.

As for the Stenmark Twins, Jordan and Zac Stenmark, they’re still killing the modelling game, but they’ve also made a ‘yuge foray into eyewear, working on a brand that aids in blocking blue light.

Jordan recently told The Daily Telegraph: “Zac likes to read medical journals. He’s been doing that for a long time. He’s so enthusiastic about the fundamentals of health, which includes sleep.”

Well there you have it.

More Stuff From PEDESTRIAN.TV

In-person 2022 International AIDS Conference to take place in Montreal – Washington Blade

WASHINGTON, D.C. – People around the world have struggled for more than a year while stuck at home for school and work. But this physical and social isolation has taken a particularly tough toll on LGBTQ+ youth, data and interviews show. 

That’s because the pandemic cut many gay and transgender youth off from the places and spaces where they feel free to be themselves and forced them to spend a lot more time with family members who may not accept them.

“A lot of my friends are in the closet…and being stuck at home, they can’t really get out into the world,” said K.C. Elowitch, a 14-year-old transgender student in Rockville, Md. “At school, they were able to do whatever they wanted and be whoever they wanted. Now being stuck at home with [their families] is a lot more stressful.”

Elowitch was one of 11 young people, ages 14 to 22, who participated in a recent LGBTQ+ youth mental health focus group hosted by the Urban Health Media Project, a Washington-area nonprofit that trains diverse high school students from under-resourced communities to do multimedia health and social issue journalism. 

Elowitch’s experience was echoed by others in the focus group. 

“I was in a bad place when I was closeted,” said Wendy Nichols, a 22-year-old trans woman who began transitioning last summer. “Not just mentally, but literally and physically.” 

Living with transphobic parents made it “hard to be comfortable with myself,” said Nichols. 

Wendy (left) is shown with her twin brother (right)

Focus group members honed in on topics that make it hard to be LGBTQ+, including: 

  • A lack of positive and realistic representation of LGBTQ+ youth in media;
  • Being misdiagnosed in doctor’s offices and being treated unfairly due to sexuality, along with other health inequities; and
  • The impact of strict religious beliefs about sexual orientation and gender identity.

Participants were encouraged to share openly, and were led through the 90-minute discussion by professionals, and fellow members of the LGBTQ+ community. The focus group was co-moderated by Heidi Ellis and Josh Rivera. Ellis, who identifies as lesbian, was a senior adviser at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in the Obama administration and now runs her own advocacy and consulting company. Rivera, Money & Consumer Editor at USA TODAY, is gay and chairs the newspaper’s diversity committee.  

The focus group participants talked about what they would like addressed by the media and what they would like to see change. They emphasized topics such as safety, gender identity, and safely coming out to others.

Roman Sardo-Longo, a 16-year-old trans male who joined the virtual focus group from Cleveland, said having more LGBTQ+ representation in the media could help other young people more easily accept peers like him.

“It took me a while to come out [as trans] because I was terrified that my friends would not understand, that they weren’t gonna get it, that they would think it was a weird thing they would have to accommodate for,” he said.

Others shared their experiences with religious beliefs that oppose  LGBTQ+ identity and sexuality. 

Tris Buchanan, a DC high school senior, is shown in a recent selfie.

Tris Buchanan, 17, lives in Washington, D.C., and identifies as gender-fluid. Buchanan’s parents’ Christian religion played a big role in their struggle to come out.  

“Some die-hard Christians…say God does not like gays, God doesn’t like anyone who’s part of the LGBTQ community,” said Buchanan. “Homophobes use the Bible and use God as excuses.”

Nichols, who also grew up in a conservative Christian household in Texas, said the concept of “toxic masculinity” also greatly affected her as she was growing up. 

“I was told, ‘Men don’t cry,’ ” said Nichols. “I grew up with that and it skewed my views.” 

When Nichols was 16, she finally decided to tell her family she identified as a woman. Her late mother, who had struggled with mental illness since a serious brain injury in a car crash, took Nichols for a drive and threatened to drive them both into the river if her daughter didn’t retract the statement. So Nichols did. 

But last June at 21, Nichols began transitioning to a female by taking hormones she got off the Internet. She didn’t have health insurance and lived nearly five hours from the nearest health care provider who would treat her.  After her father died of cancer last August, she moved to the Washington, D.C., area to live with a friend she met online. 

When that didn’t work out, Nichols became homeless and called the LGBTQ+ youth shelter Casa Ruby. There, she found comfort with others like her and within two months, was connected to the transitional housing where she can now live for the next 18 months, if needed. She begins a new job as a receptionist in early May. 

Nichols, who struggles with substance use and what she believes is depression, said she’s feeling more hopeful than ever that “one day I can overcome it all.” 

“The future seems so bright now,” she said. “I’m not stuck in a place where I couldn’t be myself or dreading the next bad thing as I did for most of 2020 when I was preparing for my father to pass away.” 

UHMP also just completed a workshop on the relationship between housing and health, including LGBTQ+ youth homelessness in D.C. and Baltimore. That story will run soon in the Blade. Another reporting workshop this summer will explore youth mental health, with a special focus on the LGBTQ+ and Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) communities. UHMP is seeking applications for 20 high school students to attend.

UHMP is also pursuing reporting on topics proposed by the young people who attended the focus group. Two participants are working on a story about the additional challenges faced by LGBTQ+ youth with learning disabilities. 

Jojo Brew, 18, is a DC high school senior and photographer.

Jojo Brew, an 18-year-old trans male in Washington, D.C., who participated in the focus group, believes the LGBTQ+ community should produce positive content on social media sites such as Instagram in order to raise awareness and promote understanding of gender and sexuality issues.

To that end, he’s begun interviewing and photographing other LGBTQ+ teens in the D.C. area for visual articles and social media posts and told a little of his own story for Instagram. Brew is also helping plan a June 18 LGBTQ+ event co-hosted by UHMP in Washington, where he hopes young people who may not be out can be “one with the community” even if they don’t speak publicly.  

Having that exposure to other LGBTQ+ people, they’d realize they aren’t the only ones going through a tough time,” said Brew. “They want to be heard and feel some type of love.” 

Brew was recently awarded a Children’s Defense Fund fellowship grant to chronicle the sense of community in Southeast Washington and is working with UHMP to capture and share the stories of LGBTQ+ youth in the D.C. area. 

UHMP is looking for LGBTQ+ people of all ages who are willing to be interviewed about youth mental health. We’d like to hear from youth and adults on all topics, including the impact of the reactions of community, government, parents, religious organizations and peers to youth gender and identity. What helped you weather challenges that could help the next generation?  Let us know at [email protected] 

Vanessa Falcon is a UHMP intern and senior at Miami Lakes Educational Center in Florida. Jayne O’Donnell, former health policy reporter at USA TODAY, is UHMP’s founder.

Capital Pride reiterates 2018 policy banning DC police from parade – Washington Blade

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The Capital Pride Alliance, the group that organizes D.C.’s annual LGBTQ Pride events, says it adopted a policy in 2018 to ban uniformed D.C. police officers from marching in the Capital Pride Parade.

Some LGBTQ community members contacted by the Washington Blade, including D.C. Black Pride organizer Earl Fowlkes, have said they were unaware of the Capital Pride policy of not allowing police participation in the parade and other Capital Pride sponsored events.

Fowlkes, who serves as executive director of the D.C.-based Center for Black Equity, which supports Black Pride events throughout the country, said D.C. Black Pride has had police presence at some of its events over the past 30 years and has no plans to ban police from its activities.

Ryan Bos, the Capital Pride Alliance executive director, sent the Blade a statement he said Capital Pride posted on its website in June of 2020 formally announcing the police policy. The statement came five days after an earlier statement posted on the group’s website expressing strong solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement.

“In 2018 the decision was made that MPD [D.C. Metropolitan Police Department] would not participate as a contingent in the Pride Parade, and has not since,” says the statement, which was posted on June 8, 2020. “Going forward, CPA will not permit any uniformed and armed police officers to march in the Pride Parade or participate in CPA-sanctioned events,” the statement continues.

“As required by the city government, MPD has jurisdiction to close and clear the streets,” the statement says. “The MPD will continue to manage street closures as outlined in permit requirements. When needed, CPA will hire private security as has been done previously.”

The statement concludes by saying Capital Pride Alliance was committed to having “further talks with its LGBTQ+ partners and other organizations and the city to address the on-going concerns that have been raised by the community.” It adds that Capital Pride Alliance “will take additional actions in the coming days and weeks.”

Although the statement did not say so directly, it was referring to the earlier statement discussing Capital Pride’s support for the nationwide protests in June 2020 over the murder of Minneapolis resident George Floyd at the hands of a police officer who was later convicted of second-degree murder and manslaughter for Floyd’s death.

“Pride this year comes on the heels of a global pandemic and a nation confronting the murder of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers,” the earlier statement posted on June 3, 2020, says.

“This horrific tragedy, and the murders of Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, and Ahmaud Abrery by police and white vigilantes, have created a nationwide uprising crying out for racial justice and the protection of Black life,” the statement says.

“As members of the Black and Brown communities have stood with the LGBTQ+ community, the Capital Pride Alliance stands in complete solidarity to unite against those disparities that impact communities of color,” says the statement. “We pledge that we will work together to find solutions and make the positive changes that are so desperately needed to end inequity, injustice, and violence against people of color.”

In prior years, uniformed members of the D.C. police LGBT Liaison Unit have marched as a contingent in the Capital Pride Parade. During some prior years going back to the 1990s, D.C. police chiefs have joined the parade in police vehicles or watched the parade while standing along the parade route.

D.C. police spokesperson Dustin Sternbeck did not respond to a request by the Blade for comment on the Capital Pride policy of banning uniformed police participation in Pride events.

Gay retired D.C. Police Lt. Brett Parson, who served as director of the department’s Special Liaison Branch, which oversees the LGBT Liaison Unit, declined to comment on the Capital Pride ban on D.C. police participation.

Some LGBTQ activists have expressed the view that D.C. police participation in Pride events, especially participation by high-level police officials, was a sign of the D.C. police department’s strong support for the LGBTQ community.

But other activists, including members of the local transgender community, have said police crackdowns on sex workers, including transgender female sex workers of color, have involved what they believe to be a misplacement of police priorities. The local transgender and sex worker advocacy group No Justice No Pride has long called on Capital Pride to ban police from participation in all Pride-related events.

In the years since Capital Pride adopted its police policy, other cities, including Seattle, Denver, and just last week New York City’s Pride organization adopted policies banning police participation in their Pride parades and other Pride events.

Bos of Capital Pride said that similar to last year, due to COVID restrictions in place earlier this year, the traditional D.C. Pride Parade and festival will not be held in June this year. Although D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser earlier this month removed all restrictions on large outdoor events beginning June 11, Bos said Capital Pride did not have time to organize a parade and festival for June. He said a Capital Pride Parade and festival are under consideration for October of this year.

The Capital Pride website includes information about a number of smaller Pride events for June, both in-person and virtual events. Among them will be a caravan of cars and vehicles decorated with Pride displays scheduled to travel across the city on June 12 to view houses and businesses that will display Pride decorations on their buildings or in their front yards.

Fowlkes said D.C. Black Pride organizers also fully support the Black Lives Matter movement and have condemned the incidents of police abuse, including the George Floyd murder in Minneapolis. But he said Black Pride organizers see no reason for banning police participation, especially the LGBT police officers who regularly attend Black Pride events.

“We’ve never had a problem,” he said. “Our members have never voiced a problem in dealing with the police,” according to Fowlkes.

“We know a lot of queer police officers and I welcome their presence,” Fowlkes said. “As long as they behave, I welcome everyone’s presence. It’s open to everybody. I can’t see eliminating the police any more than if people come in an Army uniform.”

David Johns, executive director of the D.C.-based LGBTQ group National Black Justice Coalition, has taken a different position than that of Black Pride.

“The D.C. Capital Pride Alliance was right to ban uniformed police from participating in the Pride Parade when it made its decision back in 2018,” Johns told the Blade in a statement. “For too many members of the LGBTQ+ community, especially Black LGBTQ+ and same-gender loving people, the presences of armed, uniform police make us feel less safe,” he said.

“It is important that the D.C. Capital Pride Alliance recognized that the struggle for civil rights for all must uplift all parts of us all of the time – including Black LGBTQ+ people who have too often been sidelined or excluded from the important discussions facing our community,” Johns said.

In yet another indication that the LGBTQ community is divided on the police issue, Washington Post columnist Jonathan Capehart, who’s gay and African American, wrote a column published in the Post on Monday expressing strong disagreement with the New York City Pride organization’s decision last week to ban LGBTQ police officers from marching in the New York Pride parade next month.

Capehart wrote that he fully understands the concerns over police abuse in New York and other cities in the past and in recent times. But he said he believes the New York Pride organizers made a “really bad call” in banning the NYPD Gay Officers Action League or GOAL from marching in this year’s parade.

“If you’ve been to a pride parade, you know it’s a celebration of acceptance and inclusion,” said Capehart in his column. “That’s why it’s beyond troubling that a community made up of so many who’ve been rejected by their families because of who they are is now turning on its own members because of what they do for a living,” he states. “This is wrong. This is shortsighted. This is a mistake.”

Pastor Who Advocates Death for Gays to Appear With CO Lawmaker and Legislative Aide at Conference – Colorado Times Recorder

Among the scheduled speakers at this year’s annual Rocky Mountain Homeschool Conference is Kevin Swanson, a Colorado pastor, evangelical radio host, and political operative, who believes that the death penalty is an appropriate “punishment” for the “crime” of being gay.

“Yes, Leviticus 20:13 calls for the death penalty for homosexuals. Yes, Romans, Chapter 1, Verse 32, the apostle Paul does say that homosexuals are worthy of death! His words, not mine! And I am not ashamed of the gospel of Jesus Christ! … And I know I have taken the counsel; many have told me this weekend, “You be careful! You choose your words carefully! We have presidential [hopefuls] coming down to this conference this weekend!” I understand that. But I am not ashamed of the truth of the word of God. And I am willing to go to jail for it.”

Kevin Swanson, Nov. 7, 2013, National Religious Liberties Conference in Des Moines, IA

Also slated as speakers for this year’s conference are state Rep. Kim Ransom (R-Lone Tree) and Carolyn Martin, the policy director for state Rep. Stephanie Luck (R-Penrose).

Ransom and Martin are scheduled to moderate a breakout session at the conference entitled “Conversation Cafe — Engaging in the Battle for the Biblical Founding of America.”

All three speakers have long histories as advocates for homeschooling.

Carolyn Martin, is listed on the conference website as the Director of Government Relations for Christian Home Educators of Colorado. She worked as a registered lobbyist for that organization from 2015 until late 2020.

While she still works at the state Capitol during the legislative session as policy director for Luck, she is no longer registered as a lobbyist. The conference website does not list her current employment as a legislative political aide, but does mention that “this has been Carolyn’s fifth session keeping the watch at the Capitol in Denver over our homeschooling freedoms, parental rights, and religious liberty.”

First elected to her seat in 2014, Ransom is a current member of the Joint Budget and House Appropriations committees in the Colorado legislature. She has previously served on House Education and Health committees.

Swanson’s radio show debuted on Colorado airwaves in 2003, and he has garnered attention for his ultraconservative, controversial opinions based on a biblical worldview and his antagonistic role as a troll. Critics have called him a “shock pastor.”

He advocates for male-led families and churches, and rails against feminism and homosexuality.

He has promoted all three ill-fated Personhood initiatives in Colorado, including the first in the nation in 2008, co-sponsored by then-teenager and now-chair of the state GOP, Kristi Burton Brown.

Swanson, who ran for a U.S. Senate seat and for Colorado governor, has also denounced Girl Scouts of the USA in 2013 for “supporting lesbianism” and being “antithetical to a biblical vision for womanhood.”

He continued, “In fact, if you want a communist in the White House in the year 2020 you have got to get more daughters raised with the worldview, the independent mindset, the worldview that is presented by the Girl Scouts of America.”

Following catastrophic flooding in Boulder County and other front range communities in 2013, Swanson suggested that the legalization of marijuana, abortion, and “decadent homosexual activity” were possibly indirect causes for the devastation, presumably by incurring God’s wrath.

Swanson had former Alabama Supreme Court Justice and candidate for U.S. Senate, Roy Moore (R-AL) as a frequent guest on his radio show, before Moore was exposed for inappropriate sexual misconduct with a minor during his failed Senate campaign. Previously, Moore had been removed from his seat on the state Supreme Court twice for judicial misconduct.

In November 2015, Swanson organized the National Religious Liberties Conference, held in DesMoines, Iowa, where 3 presidential candidates –Ted Cruz, Mike Huckabee, and Bobby Jindal — appeared from the campaign trail, embracing his hardline audience and messaging.

It was Swanson’s speech at that conference where he cited New and Old Testament scripture to encourage capital punishment for homosexuality and encouraged parents of gay children to protest their same-sex weddings by covering themselves in cow manure at the entrance to the venue.

Cruz had attended the National Religious Liberties Conference with his father, Rafael, a pastor and speaker at the conference, who once claimed that gay marriage was a government conspiracy to destroy the family.

But Kevin Swanson’s controversial rhetoric has precipitated prominent speakers withdrawing from other conferences were Swanson was scheduled to appear.

In 2018, U.S. Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA) withdrew from giving a keynote at another Christian conference organized by Swanson in Washington DC, saying that when he agreed to attend and speak at the conference he hadn’t known about Swanson’s participation, nor had he heard of Swanson’s anti-gay rhetoric.

Before being elected to Congress, Johnson had established himself as an anti-LGBTQ activist, working as a senior attorney and spokesman for Alliance Defending Freedom, receiving an award from Tony Perkins’ Family Research Council, and affiliating with Kyle Duncan, a Fifth Circuit Court judge who was appointed by Trump following a career of representing anti-LGBTQ positions as an attorney.

In 2015, Christian Home Educators of Colorado organized the Rocky Mountain Super Conference on the Family in Denver. Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar, celebrity parents of the reality TV show “19 Kids and Counting” withdrew from that conference after a child molestation scandal involving their son, Josh.

With just two weeks before the Rocky Mountain Homeschooling Conference kicks off, it appears that all scheduled speakers and presenters are still on board.

A spokeswoman for Ransom responded to an inquiry as to whether she will consider withdrawing from the conference due to Swanson’s participation, saying, “Rep. Ransom will be attending the conference because of her longstanding support of homeschooling.”

Carolyn Martin did not respond to an email request for comment about her participation in this year’s conference.

Swanson still appears on the website as a featured speaker for this year’s conference. He has also participated in previous years.

Who’s Your Daddy? The Rise & Rise of Single Gay Dads – Star Observer

In the lead up to Growing Families Annual Donor and Surrogacy Conference in Brisbane on 19/20 June, Sam Everingham reflects on the changes in who chooses to parent and how they go about it.

When my husband and I were going through the surrogacy process over ten years ago, nearly everyone ventured offshore to locate a donor and surrogate. These days a lot more are working with an Australian donor and sometimes even an Australian surrogate. 

Nonetheless, because Australian surrogates cannot be compensated and are usually unable to receive the level of support that professionals overseas can offer, the Australian route can be a tough road to navigate for all parties.

Nowadays thanks to organisations like Growing Families, there is a lot more support available for those considering surrogacy.  While Covid-related travel restrictions have slowed down processes, a surprising number of singles and couples have, with our help, found ways to move ahead.

For many it has meant shipping sperm interstate or offshore rather than travelling themselves. While the processes and paperwork involved require patience, when it comes to building family, determination is one quality you must have.

Single Parent

Determination is an even more important quality for single intended parents. It was ten years ago I first began meeting guys who were choosing surrogacy as a route to solo parenthood. I now see more and more coming to me each year for advice. That group increasingly includes single women.

Bruce Walmsley is one single professional I first met at one of our events three years ago. A psychologist who practices in Melbourne, Bruce had always wanted to be a dad . Yet he was in his forties before he decided to move ahead.

I began doubting whether it was achievable” Bruce admits “but my tipping point for action came through some encouraging advice – ‘if you want to do it, you’ll find a way.’” 

Bruce had the financial resources to engage in US surrogacy and is now dad to 15-month old daughter Frankie.

While he was single at the outset, Bruce met his current partner a few months into the journey.  Yet Bruce takes on all the day-to-day responsibility for raising Frankie. As a solo dad, he admits “the psychological, legal and financial decisions were all the more challenging”. 

‘Make sure you’re psychologically and emotionally ready’

“My workplace is incredibly supportive with work arrangements, particularly flexible start and finish times and work days” Bruce explains. “I also rely on childcare during work days and for time to myself. Of course, I rely on my partner for his emotional support and help with errands, and friends are invaluable for short-notice care, especially with my wider family living interstate”. 

What advice would Bruce give to those considering whether surrogacy is for them?

“Make sure you’re psychologically and emotionally ready for the experience. Think about your expectations and how you will cope with setbacks. Think ahead to the kind of relationship you want with your surrogate and whether you want a relationship between your family and the donor and how that will work for your child.”

Bruce and other gay dads who created families with the help of donors and surrogates in the US, Canada and Australia will share their experiences in Brisbane on 19-20 June.

The upcoming two day get-together is a unique event for those considering building their own family. Attendees come to get to know parents, surrogates, donors, children via surrogacy as well as specialist lawyers, IVF physicians, surrogacy specialists and a host of other experts in this complex field. https://www.growingfamilies.org/2021-conference-and-event-schedule/

Growing Families is an information and referral hub for those wanting to build family with the help of donor IVF and/or surrogacy.

A year since ‘I can’t breathe’ – USA TODAY

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A year has passed since George Floyd’s murder, half of the adults in the United States have gotten a COVID-19 vaccine, and a man lost in the wilderness has been found.

👋 Hey, hey, hey! It’s Laura. Happy Tuesday. I’ve got more news than you can shake a stick at.

But first, coming to a sky near you! 🌝 A super-blood-flower-corn-planting-milk moon and BONUS total lunar eclipse in some areas of the U.S. will be visible overnight and Wednesday morning. Don’t miss it! Here’s where you can see it best.

The Short List is a snappy USA TODAY news roundup. Subscribe to the newsletter here or text messages here.

‘A year that’s ripped my heart out’

To millions around the world, the final minutes of Floyd’s life, captured on a shaky smartphone video one year ago Tuesday, reflected decades of police brutality against Black citizens and unleashed global protests calling for racial justice. But few will experience the bile and pain of May 25 as heavily as his family and friends.

  • Memorials: Following several days of marches and rallies across the country marking the anniversary, the intersection of 38th and Chicago in front of Cup Foods in Minneapolis has been transformed into an outdoor festival for the “Rise and Remember George Floyd” celebration, including a candlelight vigil at 8 p.m. A celebration of life will be held by The George Floyd Memorial Foundation in downtown Minneapolis with activities for families, performances and guest speakers. 
  • Meeting the president: Members of Floyd’s family, including his 7-year-old daughter Gianna and her mother, Roxie Washington; Floyd’s sister, Bridgett; as well as Floyd’s three brothers and nephew will also meet with President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.
  • Michelle Obama marked the day by honoring Floyd’s daughter and “all the young people out there who have seen so much, but refuse to give up hope.”

The police were called out to investigate a report that Floyd allegedly used a counterfeit $20 bill to pay for cigarettes. But for those closest to Floyd, his death was a theft; the abrupt loss of a friend and confidant, of a fun-loving older cousin who swung you up toward the sky or sent Happy Birthday texts, of a lifelong friend who helped troubled youth give up their guns, of a brother who was always ready with a prayer and whose killing left a void stretching from Minneapolis to Houston’s Third Ward, where he grew up. “It’s been a year that’s ripped my heart out,” his sister, LaTonya Floyd, said.

A couple pays their respects to George Floyd at the intersection of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue on Tuesday in Minneapolis. In cities around the U.S., groups honored the life of Floyd, who was murdered by Minneapolis Police officer Derek Chauvin on May 25, 2020.

Biden’s Putin in his time

Switzerland in June sounds nice. Biden will be meeting face-to-face with Russian President Vladimir Putin there on June 16, a high-stakes summit that comes amid escalating tensions between Moscow and Washington, the White House announced on Tuesday. U.S.-Russia relations have been strained since Biden took office, as the White House confronted Moscow over its interference in the 2020 presidential election and its role in the massive SolarWinds cyberattack, among other aggressions. Biden is expected to discuss a range of topics, from arms control to American support for Ukraine’s sovereignty in the face of Russian aggression. 

Vice President Joe Biden shakes hands with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Moscow on March 10, 2011. The two plan to meet again in June.

What everyone’s talking about

  • It’s a jellyfish jamboree! Thousands of cannonball jellyfish pile up on the shores of Tybee Island, Georgia. You gotta see these things.
  • That’s a lot of money: Viral ‘Charlie Bit My Finger’ video sells as NFT for more than $760,000.
  • Prison officers charged following Jeffrey Epstein’s suicide will avoid jail time in deal with federal prosecutors.
  • She wanted to feed the monkeys. Could you blame her? Zoo pressing charges against woman who walked through moat and into spider monkeys’ exhibit.
  • Deaths by suicide declined at the height of the pandemic. Researchers have some ideas why.
  • Those infamous edited yearbook photos and society’s obsession with girls’ bodies: ‘You can’t win.’

Half of the country’s been vaccinated

Biden has set a goal of getting at least one shot into the arm of 70% of adults in the U.S. by July 4th. So how’s it going? 

Half of the adults in the country will have rolled up their sleeves for a full round of COVID-19 vaccines by Tuesday, according to the White House. Vaccination rates still vary by state, however, with at least 25 states reporting half their adult residents have been fully vaccinated. Officials have stressed that the coronavirus will continue to spread in communities with lower levels of vaccinations. More than 60% of adults have now had at least one shot.

Also on Tuesday: Moderna announced that its vaccine was 93% effective against COVID-19 in children aged 12 to 17 after the first dose and 100% two weeks after the second dose, with no cases of COVID-19 reported among vaccinated participants. Moderna hopes to be able to amend the emergency use authorization from the FDA to allow children as young as 12 to receive it. The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was authorized for use in adults and teens 16 and older in December; the allowed age was dropped to 12 in May. 

  • CDC investigating cases of heart inflammation in teens, young adults who got a two-shot COVID-19 vaccine. Here’s what we know.
  • Parental consent needed to get COVID-19 shot? Here’s how some teens are approaching their anti-vaccine families.
Justin Bishop, 13, watches as registered nurse Jennifer Reyes inoculates him with a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at the Mount Sinai South Nassau Vaxmobile site in Freeport, New York. US health officials say that most fully vaccinated Americans can skip testing for COVID-19, even if they were exposed to someone infected.

Unruly passengers take to the skies

Enough is enough, says the flight attendants union. According to a letter sent to Southwest Airlines CEO, a flight attendant suffered facial injuries and lost two teeth after being assaulted by a passenger over the weekend. In an appeal for more safeguards as travel rebounds, the union wrote to the CEO, asking management to take measures for their protection — as well as for other passengers. The union said there were 477 passenger-misconduct incidents on Southwest between April 8 and May 15. The FAA has also taken notice of a spike in passengers behaving badly, noting that since Jan. 1, the agency had received approximately 2,500 reports of unruly behavior by passengers, including nearly 2,000 who refused to comply with the federal facemask mandate.

Southwest Airlines and other airlines repeatedly remind passengers to keep their masks on during the flight except when briefly eating or drinking.

Real quick

Man missing in wilderness found alive

Next time I go camping, I’m asking Harry for some tips on survival. Fisherman Harry Burleigh, 69, was just found alive and well — more than 2 weeks after being reported missing in Oregon’s wilderness. He was reported missing on May 7 after failing to return home from a camping trip in the Toketee area of the Umpqua National Forest, according to the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office. Rescue teams located his vehicle at a trail the next day but did not find him. A week later, officials came across a makeshift shelter and his tackle box. “They left him a note and lighter and told him to make a fire and they would be back in to get him tomorrow,” his wife, Stacy, wrote on Facebook. Another week passed with no sign of Burleigh, until Sunday, when rescuers found another makeshift shelter and called out to him. This time, he responded. After being located in stable condition, a helicopter transported Burleigh to a hospital for an evaluation, where he was reunited with his family.

Searchers exit helicopter after locating Harry Burleigh.

A break from the news

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Josh Brolin Knows All About Those Thirsty Thanos Memes – Pride.com

Josh Brolin Knows All About Those Thirsty Thanos Memes

Wait…is Thanos a gay icon? Well, that’s what the internet was claiming at least…

As our friends from Queerty point out, earlier this month, “Gay Thanos” was trending on Twitter because according to some fans, the colors of the stones on the Infinity Gauntlet worn by the infamous Marvel Cinematic Universe villain resemble those of the Pride flag. 

As expected, Stan Twitter had a field day with this revelation, and all sorts of memes proclaiming Thanos an LGBTQ+ icon ensued:

One of the most infamous examples of the memery that resulted from the theory of Thanos being gay included a pic of him posing seductively on a bed, with his huge ‘ole purple peach out in the open for all to enjoy…

And if you thought all this chaos was just an insular moment for Marvel fans, think again! The memes even got around to Oscar-nominated actor Josh Brolin, who famously voiced Thanos in the Avengers films.

“I don’t remember having this photograph taken,” Josh captioned, reposting the infamous ThanAss pic on his Instagram account. “But then again there are a lot of things I don’t remember.”

We love when celebs are good sports about things like this! Oh internet, please never change! 

LA Gay Bar The Abbey in West Hollywood Has a Hidden Bakery Inside – Eater LA

When discussing West Hollywood nightlife, the conversation either starts or ends with The Abbey. The iconic club, restaurant, and bar turned 30 over the weekend, with festivities that spilled out onto Robertson, just south of Santa Monica Boulevard, complete with cocktails and a lesser-known menu item that started the entire influential enterprise: dessert.

There’s a massive bakery tucked inside of The Abbey, with a tempting display of red velvet cakes, cheesecakes, apple pies, and ding dongs ready for club hoppers, brunchers, cocktail lovers, or perpetual happy hour seekers. But the massive 12,500-square-foot Abbey experience — featuring, in its modern iteration, four full-service bars, DJ booths, dining areas, and go-go dancer podiums — had modest beginnings. Owner David Cooley opened the original Abbey in 1991, in the now empty and former Bossa Nova space. Cooley, even then, envisioned a queer-positive space with desserts.

“I borrowed money, used my credit cards. I asked a friend if he wanted to invest. He asked how I was going to make money selling coffee and a couple of cakes on Robertson,” Cooley says. “He said I needed to be on Santa Monica [Boulevard]. When people say you can’t do it, that’s even more of a challenge. [And] from day one, I had a line out the door.”

After spending three years at the former Bossa Nova location, Cooley moved directly across the street and into a 1,500-square-foot space that used to be a pottery shop. His landlord was supportive and allowed Cooley to expand. He continued to move outward, acquiring Here Lounge and revamping The Abbey into the Los Angeles cultural idol it is now. Cooley expanded the property five times with distinct vibes in each corner, from the striking Chapel room, to the loungey escape from the dance floor called Within, or garden dining they lovingly refer to as Abbey Road.

Throughout the changes — which included selling and buying back his business from SBE in 2007 — The Abbey’s dessert production remains consistent. And some of its 275-person staff have been working there for decades. Turnover is low, including longtime pastry chef Alan Zumel, whose creations are some of the restaurant’s best-sellers — alongside the impossibly strong martinis.

Zumel joined The Abbey 10 years ago and churns out the aforementioned desserts along with apple tarts, berry crisps, unicorn bars with Fruity Pebbles, butterscotch pudding, and tiramisu. “I make a mean bread pudding,” says Zumel. All desserts are available from 11 a.m. until 2 a.m., so if anyone desires a slice of Zumel’s seasonal key lime pie while on the dance floor, it is entirely a possibility. “Retro seems to resonate with people like apple pies, key lime pie, or anything to do with childhood memories,” he says.

Cooley leaves the creativity up to Zumel throughout the year, apparent in the Halloween cookies that border on murder scenes with ample red food coloring and sweet, twisted human body parts formed from pastry dough. Zumel’s key lime, meanwhile, is piled high with two inches of meringue and a thick graham cracker crust. His work might even include wedding cakes or preparing sweets for causes and fundraisers championed by Cooley, including The Abbey’s Christmas in September drive where the space is decked out in fake snow and decorations for the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

The key lime pie from The Abbey in West Hollywood
The Abbey’s key lime pie
Courtesy of The Abbey

Cooley opened and closed four times since March 2020, a challenging feat since most bars and clubs were unable to open during COVID-19. He hopes to be around for another 30 years. This section of West Hollywood transformed considerably over the years. Bossa Nova, the longstanding Brazilian standby, is gone, as is Hamburger Haven which closed in late 2019. The Abbey is now sandwiched between reality star Lisa Vanderpump’s restaurants PUMP and Sur, while Lance Bass is planning to open America’s biggest gay bar inside of Rage, which closed in 2020 over a landlord dispute. Many of LA’s queer spaces have disappeared since March 2020. Cooley wants to bring barstools back as soon as possible, as his elder regulars prefer to sit at the bar for a meal and drinks. He says that many of these customers have suffered from isolation while sheltering in place. LA county banned barstools until coronavirus restrictions are lifted.

If sitting in The Abbey’s front patio, a glance across the street is to see West Hollywood’s future. When construction begins for Robertson Lane, a future 241 room hotel and retail space featuring four restaurants and a nightclub, the entire block will experience a dramatic — and permanent — change. At present, that development is delayed, so the buildings and lots adjacent to The Abbey are either boarded up or bulldozed over. Directly south of The Abbey is the construction site for West Hollywood Park, which opens in the fall. Until then, there’s always pie at the Abbey.

Pride celebration at The Abbey in West Hollywood
Pride at The Abbey
Courtesy of The Abbey

, Los Angeles, CA

Texas Christian Groups Want Religious Bostock Exemption – Law360

Law360 (May 25, 2021, 4:43 PM EDT) — Two Christian organizations asked a Texas federal judge to back their proposed class action against the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, saying the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the First Amendment exempt them from complying with federal LGBTQ workplace protections.

Bear Creek Bible Church and Braidwood Management Inc., which says it “operates overtly as a Christian business,” lodged a bid Monday for summary judgment and a permanent injunction. The duo told U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor the U.S. Supreme Court’s watershed decision last summer in Bostock v. Clayton County places them “in a bind” by requiring them to violate their religious…

SNL’s Latest Pride Month Skit Is a Must-Watch for HR and Marketing Professionals – Triple Pundit

Brace yourself: Pride Month is almost here, which means companies will still start overlaying their logos with the rainbow flag and proclaim their “allyship” with the LGBTQ community.

Of course, a quick search engine check will reveal that too many of these companies have also funneled contributions to political leaders who have supported legislation that is hostile toward LGBTQ rights.

But never mind that hypocrisy, as we have at least one reason to celebrate how the queer community is breaking through.

Last Saturday, SNL brilliantly skewered what critics have long said has frequently been an off-message, corporate-sponsored Pride Month for years. But the video, in which Lil Nas X makes an appearance (and really gets things rolling), also shows how far the comedy sketch show has come showcasing LGBTQ voices over the past decade. As much as the skit throws shade at some of Pride Month’s cringeworthy and eye-rolling aspects, it is also a celebration of queer culture, presented by LGBTQ actors and writers, not toned down, with zero apologies and nary a concern if straight people get it or not.

Editor’s note: Be sure to subscribe to our Brands Taking Stands newsletter, which comes out every Wednesday.

As with most of the entertainment industry’s productions in television and movies, gay characters on SNL were long the frequent punchline and cruel butt of jokes on the show. The first openly gay cast member of SNL, Terry Sweeney, lasted only one season during the mid-1980s: His characters were often the crassest and clichéd cliched gay stereotypes; meanwhile, off the set, Sweeney had to endure the homophobic taunts of colleagues such as Chevy Chase.

Fast forward more than 35 years later, this season SNL has showcased three openly queer cast members, and several sketches have clearly been written with the point of view of those comedians and gay writers. For years, gays were the targets of humor often written by their straight colleagues. Now, the work of those including Bowen Yang and former SNL writer Julio Torres has turned that dynamic on its head: Gay writers and actors are creating more content, and it’s up to the straight audience to figure out the jokes, satire and context.

And therein lies the lesson this SNL parody offers to corporate America: The rainbow flag and boilerplate language that says “We stand with the LGBTQ community” are not inherently bad, but now, they are nothing more than the baseline. Many of those press releases that have been emailed and posted publicly are clearly written by a straight person, which again, isn’t necessarily wrong. Nevertheless, it’s clear gay employees or the wider LGBTQ community often had zero input in those Pride Month proclamations. That oversight certainly shouldn’t occur this year, considering the myriad of bills in statehouses across the U.S. that are clearly designed to shame transgender citizens and their LGBTQ neighbors.

So why should marketers and human resource folks watch SNL’s Pride Month video? Once you get past the NSFW references, the clip can also be viewed as a reminder for corporate managers to check in with their LGBTQ employees, ask the how they are faring amidst all the news out there, what challenges they still face as gay and queer employees in their organization and what they would like to see from the organizations for which they work.

Bottom line, many of us don’t want to be made to feel like the “token gay” that demonstrates their company has a “tolerant” or “working” culture. We just want to be, be ourselves, and only be – period. The end.

Image credit: Mercedes Mehling: Unsplash

Book Review: Our Story: Coming Out in the Time of HIV and AIDS – Ubyssey Online

Know. Your. History. This phrase is what motivated me to learn more about queer history and pick up this memoir. My knowledge of the AIDS crisis had been reduced to “silence = death” and the understanding that many people died. I had never learned about someone’s personal experience living through it and how it impacted their life.

Our Story: Coming Out in the Time of HIV and AIDS follows author Robert Hamilton from the late seventies to the early 2000s as a gay man. The author’s experiences reveal the constant state of grief that the 2SLGBTQIA+ community lived through during the eighties and nineties.

This book centres around his friends who were impacted by HIV and AIDS. The story particularly focuses on his late friend Joe. In the summer of 1982, Hamilton and Joe moved to Vancouver together. They first met in Edmonton the year before when Joe was involved in the drag community. Joe tested HIV positive in 1987. Yet, Joe’s HIV status did not have a negative impact on the ways in which Hamilton loved and supported him. The author moved in with Joe to care for him in the last 2 weeks of his life.

Moments of optimism and hope are highlighted through the introduction of new treatments and laughter. The sentiment of “we laugh so we don’t cry” is portrayed beautifully in this memoir. The love that Hamilton’s chosen family has for one another leaps off the pages. The narrative around those who were HIV positive is written in such a compassionate manner, as he makes sure not to reduce those who were diagnosed to their diagnosis. At the same time, it was eye-opening and upsetting to read about the way in which gay people were treated by the health care system and the obstacles they faced to access medication.

In these heartbreaking moments, there were times when I would close the book to process and grieve the loss of those who died from AIDS. But in those moments, I was met with the sound of referees blowing whistles and sports commentary.

I read most of this book with the Super Bowl in the background, one of the most, if not the most, cishet days of the year. It was jarring to switch between reading about another person close to the author testing positive for HIV and the crowds of Raymond James Stadium cheering on Tom Brady.

Tom Brady has become something of an icon, the culmination of a culture who idolizes straight, white men. As a young, queer woman, it can be suffocating to exist in a world that invests billions in a single football game but would not acknowledge the existence of a disease until thousands had already died.

Borne out of his personal journal entries, Our Story: Coming out in the time of HIV and AIDS, focuses on the friends who became Hamilton’s family. He has previously written gay stage plays and poems, but this is his first memoir. Most of his other work does not mention HIV or AIDS at all. For instance, the stage play BOYFISH is about a character named Ben helping his friend Harry sort through his commitment issues. A poem of Hamilton’s, No Sweet Joy, describes the pain of losing someone to AIDS. His other works also touch on identity, sex and relationships which relates to themes within this book.

Hamilton’s writing style immerses the reader in his friend group in a way that compels them to quickly invest in their stories. Rather than having chapters, each section has a subheading with the month and year. This method allows the reader to clearly follow the timeline of events and show how those around the author had changed due to AIDS. Hamilton’s use of prose shapes the narrative of his experiences for readers to understand from an outside perspective. This memoir is difficult to put down, but readers should prepare themselves for learning the dark reality of AIDS in the eighties and nineties.

I took an extended break from the book for the Super Bowl halftime show. Watching The Weeknd run around the stadium in his red jacket as dancers in the same outfit surrounded him was disorienting. I felt overwhelmed. Trapped. It was impossible to read Hamilton’s memoir in the face of America’s most important day (aside from Independence Day).

I waited until the game was over to finish reading. Without the background noise of clashing helmets, I was able to lean into the love that the author and his circle of friends showed one another during that time.

Knowing your history is understanding that through the hard times there is a warmth that surrounds and connects your community.

Billy Porter and ‘Pose’ embody a singular moment in LGBTQ history – KAKE

FX’s series “Pose” is one of those vehicles for storytelling. The Ryan Murphy series, in its third and final season, follows Black and Latinx youth in New York’s underground ballroom scene during the 1980s and 1990s. The ballroom scene encompasses fashion, dance, creativity and, most important, family and community. During the era “Pose” depicts, ballroom was often a refuge from violent homophobia and racism.