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Finding My Voice as a Gay Asian Immigrant Filmmaker – and Giving Voice to Others – Talkhouse

When our plane from Taiwan touched down at LAX in 1975, my mother, my father, my two older brothers and I stepped into the hot, dry sunshine of a new and, to us, very foreign world. The changes that lay ahead for all of us were profound and would affect every aspect of our lives. My parents were determined that this would become our new home, and at the same time were unyielding in their insistence on raising children with traditional Confucian values based on obedience, deference, and respect. Thus began my journey of living in two cultures at once.

Devin Fei-Fan Tau as a young boy.

Suddenly the happy-go-lucky kid that I had been vanished, as I struggled to learn a new language along with my new American name. At school, kids made fun of everything I said, everything I wore, everything I did. At home, my parents insisted on achievement and a stoic dedication to success.

I became determined to show everyone at school that I belonged, that I was not different at all. Yet even though my English became flawless and unaccented (unlike my brothers) and I excelled in both academics and sports, the bullying went on. Proving my worth in the American way was at odds, however, with my parents’ silent acceptance of starting over at the bottom of the economic ladder. For them, it meant we all had to keep our heads down, not complain, and work hard.

Despite my best efforts, I felt out of place no matter where I was. Lacking the cultural infrastructure or family support to navigate and process my sense of bewilderment, fear, and frustration, I learned to keep my emotions in check and invisible, no matter how much pain I was in. My childhood was marked by a lack of confidence in being authentically myself, without any family support, or even a vocabulary to reconcile living in two cultures at once.

And so, obediently, I studied hard. Got straight As in high school. Was accepted into the prestigious UC Berkeley Haas Business School and became a business major. Just like a compliant, respectful, uncomplaining child was supposed to do. So what if I didn’t really feel like a “regular” guy? I dated women, told myself I was in love, and thought liking men was “just a phase.”

In time, however, I found myself living in San Francisco and staring at a new and different truth. I was not just an athletic, musical, hard-partying guy with a mind for numbers. The stoic façade that I had built to create an acceptable image of myself crumbled as I began to accept that, in fact, I was gay.

This coming out to myself was painful enough, but was also anathema to my family, and challenging for my career. The pain and confusion of sorting out who, exactly, I could be, required me to once again face the challenge of integrating my past and my present. Increasingly, I began finding my voice within the LGBTQ+ community. Yet while I found acceptance there, my family did not similarly embrace me when I came out to them. Reconciling my American and my Chinese cultures remained an elusive dream.

Devin Fei-Fan Tau on set.

For decades, I balanced conflicting desires to be both strong and true to myself, to be independent and connected, to be Asian and American. One thing that helped me through this maze of self-discovery was my passion for performance: I became a devotee of stage musicals and plays, attending the theatre, going to shows, and steeping myself in those stories and mythic tales.

Eventually, my desire not just to hear stories, but to tell them, led me to the world of filmmaking. Not just to speak my own truth, but to be the person who enabled other marginalized people to speak theirs as well. In my work as a film director, I began to understand that getting to the heart of what matters most to people is an endlessly rewarding challenge.

For me, the idea that so many people don’t fit neatly into our American categories of belonging strikes a deep nerve with my experience as a queer immigrant. Our layered and interlocking identities contain stories that connect us to people everywhere. This is what led me to thinking more deeply about how the LGBTQ community, in particular, has narratives that remain untold.

The mission of my company, No Sunrise Wasted, is to bring to the screen narratives that compel audiences to think, feel, and become engaged in stories that have long been silenced. That name came to me when I was on a dawn boat ride in Varanasi, India, watching the public mass cremations, and I realized that every single day is an opportunity to create and thrive. In my documentary Who’s on Top? (narrated by George Takei), I sought to showcase both the depth of the challenges we face, and the depth of the resources we draw on to surmount them.

Devin Fei-Fan Tau with Who’s on Top? narrator George Takei.

The result is a feature-length documentary which shines a spotlight on members of the LGBTQ community – including those with a range of mountaineering experience – who set out to climb Mt. Hood and in the process challenge stereotypes about gender and sexuality in the outdoor arena. Historically excluded and ostracized as “unnatural” by some extremist groups, the LGBTQ climbers tackle not only a mountain, but assumptions about who they are and how they belong to the world of outdoor adventure.

Through my work as a filmmaker, I have experienced a depth of feeling and human understanding that has animated me, moved me to tears at times, and led me to find a new path of my own. To reconcile being an American and being an immigrant doesn’t mean choosing between one or the other. For me, it’s meant going on a journey of self-discovery, loving people along the way for who they authentically are, and finding excitement in unlocking the stories of so many others like myself.

Now available on iTunes and Google Play, Who’s on Top? is a story emblematic of anyone anywhere who has overcome judgment and criticism from both their families and society at large to become fully themselves. Watching this film, I believe you will see more than just a group of dedicated individuals preparing for the physical challenge of climbing a mountain. You will see people who are in the process of uncovering their own identities and self-conceptions, and discovering the truth that will set them literally, on top.

A still from Who’s on Top?

My journey to reconciliation doesn’t end with this film, or even the next two features that I’m currently directing and producing. The fundamentals of family and culture don’t change overnight. But they do slowly evolve. My filmmaking will continue to build on stories that inspire audiences to grow in their understanding and acceptance. And each new sunrise gives me the opportunity to rise to the challenge.

Bzzzzz: Councilor to gay critic — ‘Labhan ka nako’g mga kiha. Tuk-on tika…’ More rumored aspirants in Cebu City north race: Mary Ann de los Santos, Mimo Osmeña. – Yahoo Philippines News

‘Labhan og kiha’

WHAT WE WOULDN’T HAVE KNOWN hadn’t links sent to Bzzzzz not been watched or read:

[1] A city councilor, a woman, on Facebook Live page: “Tuk-on gyud tika’ng bayota ka.”

The person referred to, replying on his own FB-Live-page: “Siya (the councilor) 4’9″; ako 5’9″. Ako siya’ng duklon una makatuok nako.”

[2] The same councilor: “Labhan gyud nako siya’g mga kiha. My lawyer is preparing the cases.”

The same gay person: “Ako sab siya’ng shampoo-han og mga kiha. I have a battery of lawyers.”

More ‘aspirants’ for Congress

The names previously talked about as probable candidates for the House of Representatives seat for Cebu City north were former congresswoman Rachel Marguerite “Cutie” del Mar, the late Representative Raul Del Mar’s daughter; City Councilor Niña Mabatid; Majority Floor Leader Raymond Alvin Garcia; and Richard Yap, the TV star who ran and lost in 2019. Except for Cutie, who is identified with BOPK, the three others — Mabatid, Garcia and Yap — are with Partido Barug, the city’s ruling party.

Too crowded for one party slot but on the BOPK side, the names Mary Ann de los Santos and Mimo Osmeña have come up lately. No matter how many vie for the seat, usually the major contenders Barug and BOPK field only one candidate each, thus limiting the intense fight between the two camps, with the independents and other non-party-supported bets sharing the crumbs among the votes.

Cutie-Mary Ann ‘rematch’

De los Santos, former Lahug barangay captain, served as city councilor for two terms, in 2013 and 2016. But she also lost three major races: for Cebu City mayor in 2007 and for congresswoman in 2010 in the city’s north district — both under Team Rama — and for vice mayor in 2019, under BOPK.

May Ann excoriated her first party Team Rama (what is now known as Partido Barug) under which she first won as councilor, lamenting in an August 17, 2015 privileged speech that she was “assassinated, massacred, bullied, traumatized, nerve-wracked, hurt, betrayed, abused, abandoned, alienated, deceived, and left to suffer being alone.” Less than a week later, on August 22, she announced she was already a full-fledged BOPK member.

It was in the 2010 elections that Cutie del Mar won the seat her dad Raul had occupied for three consecutive terms (2001, 2004 and 2007 elections). She defeated seven rivals but de los Santos, then the Lahug barangay chief, was the most serious contender. Cutie got 58.49 percent, as against Mary Ann’s 34.73 percent, of the votes, with a lead of more than 40,000.

How about Mimo Osmeña?

Election year 2022 won’t be the first time Emilio “Mimo” Osmeña III would be feeling the political waters again.

In 2012, he did so, launching a radio program “Lamdag,” as he has done so again lately, co-hosting with a veteran broadcaster Nanding Celeste. “Purely for public service,” he said then, yet at the same time “for keeping in touch and testing the waters.” In that campaign season nine years ago, Mimo said that if he’d run, it would be “for a Senate seat or Cebu City Hall” and not then congressman Eduardo Gullas’ post in the province’s first district.

Mimo was, and is still believed to be, a registered voter in Cebu City north, the district vacated by the death of Raul Del Mar last November 16 (now under the caretaker-ship of House Speaker Lord Alan Velasco with Cutie Del Mar as Velasco’s official representative). Lito Osmeña in Mimo’s first exploratory sally into politics in 2013 said his son would run in any of four posts: senator, congressman, governor or mayor. He did not run then but he might now.

***

Tell us about it.

[paseares1@gmail.com]

Turkey is ranked 48th among 49 countries on LGBT rights in rainbow index – Stockholm Center for Freedom

Turkey was ranked 48th among 49 countries as regards the human rights of LGBT people, according to the 2021 Rainbow Europe Map published by the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA)-Europe, Turkish Minute reported.

ILGA-Europe is an independent, international nongovernmental umbrella group bringing together over 600 organizations in Europe and Central Asia.

At the end of the report, covering the January to December 2020 period, are three countries — Azerbaijan, Turkey and Armenia — exactly the same as last year. Turkey had the same ranking in the group’s 2020 index as well. At the bottom of the list is Azerbaijan, while Armenia is ranked 47th.

ILGA-Europe’s annual Rainbow Europe Map and Index, ranking the legal and policy situation of LGBT people in 49 European countries, finds that over the past 12 months advances in LGBT rights have come to almost a complete standstill.

According to the index, a large number of hate speech incidents and campaigns took place again in Turkey in 2020 against LGBT people, and in some instances the government or public figures blamed LGBT people or gay men for the COVID-19 pandemic and for spreading other illnesses.

A number of hate campaigns were run on social media and endorsed by leading political figures. In April, for instance, the #Netflixadamol (NetflixBeAMan) was trending in Turkey with over 70,000 tweets condemning Netflix for featuring two gay high school students in the show “Aşk 101” (“Love 101”).

The head of the Supreme Council of Radio and Television (RTÜK) threatened Netflix and said it would not let such content be streamed.

The COVID-19 pandemic has also placed unprecedented hardship on LGBTI people in Turkey amid state-run hate campaigns waged against them, some of which scapegoated them for the spread of the virus. LGBTI people have experienced increasing difficulties in employment and healthcare since March and faced growing levels of violence at home during lockdown. LGBTI asylum seekers have been hardest hit by the pandemic and its consequences, the findings of the index showed.

Homosexuality is not illegal in Turkey, but homophobia is widespread.

Kaos GL, one of the oldest LGBT rights groups in Turkey, last year counted more than 2,000 news articles it qualified as discriminatory — a 40 percent jump from 2019.

After a spectacular Pride March in İstanbul drew 100,000 people in 2014, the government responded by banning future events in the city, citing security concerns.

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Save the Drama for Your (Drag) Mama – Shepherd Express

Dear Ruthie is proudly brought to you by C3 Designs — Award Winning Fine Jewelry. C3 Designs offers a variety of services performed in-house, including custom jewelry design, jewelry and watch repair, appraisal, pearl and bead stringing, engraving and flip guards. C3 Designs is the winner of the Jewelers of America 2019 CASE Award.


Dear Ruthie,

Is it just me or is Milwaukee’s LGBTQ+ community full of drama and bullshit? Everywhere I look I see fighting among the drag queens, tension between young and old gays, jealousy in lesbian bars, and more. What’s the problem? Are you seeing these things, too? We need to come together as a community and stop all the drama.

Don’t You Agree?

Fed-Up Fab


Dear Fed-Up,

I’m willing to bet that every generation of Milwaukee LGBTQ+ folks believed their community was full of drama at one time or another. That said, the feeling that there is drama among the community today is nothing new.  I’m not suggesting that you’re right or wrong; I’m saying that your feelings are shared by many and have been for a long time.

I don’t know that our community is “full of drama,” as you say. I think Milwaukee has a strong, united, enthusiastic community. Sometimes when people share a great passion for something, they clash with others who share that passion but see things differently. These differences can sometimes express themselves in arguments, looking and feeling like “drama.”

Don’t let this tarnish your vision of a beautiful, smart and supportive community, honey. We’ve encouraged one another, grown the community and created a safe haven to be oneself throughout the state. Focus on the good and celebrate this community with pride, hope and love…and put the drama behind you. 


Ruthie’s Social Calendar

May 20—Karaoke Night at Hunty’s Social Lounge (734 S. Fifth St.): Whether you’re a singer or a spectator, this kooky night can’t be missed. Usher in the weekend a bit early when you check out what Uncle Hunty has in store, including $5 Smirnoff cocktails and the bar’s signature Old-Fashioneds. The good times starts at 8 p.m.

May 21 through May 23—Spring Home Improvement Show at State Fair Park (8200 W. Greenfield Ave.):  Whether you’re looking for a contractor or simply looking for a little makeover inspiration, the Wisconsin Expo Center is the place to be. See www.narimilwaukeehomeshow.com for hours, a list of exhibitors and ticket starting at $10.

May 21—Circle of Light Virtual Meeting: The Milwaukee LGBT Community Center host this anonymous meeting for those examining their spiritual journey.  The group explores various methods of faith and different denominations. Send an email to tdelagarza@mkelgbt.org for additional information as well as a link to a meeting.

May 22—Courage MKE T-Shirt Print and Sip Fundraiser at Cream City Print Lounge (8010 W. National Ave.): Calling all aspiring fashion designers, Milwaukee-lovers, drinkers, eaters…oh, hell…calling everyone! Here’s a change-of-pace fundraiser you’ve got to check out. Stop by this local T-shirt print shop and you’ll learn how to screen your shirt, using a pre-made design. Swing by between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. for coffee and mimosas or stop between 2 and 7 p.m. for a DJ and food truck. Best of all, 20% of all T-shirt sales go to Courage MKE!

May 22—“Chic” Drag show at FIVE Nightclub (5 Applegate Court, Madison): Expand your social circle by making new friends in Mad City. While there, check out this 9 p.m. show, featuring a bevy of beauties, including Dominque DeGrant from Season 1 of the reality show “Camp Wannakiki.” Tables are $15, but you’ll need to make a reservation by emailing fivetickets@yahoo.com.

May 25—”Safe Dating in the Age of COVID-19” Online Discussion: Covid infection rates may be decreasing in Wisconsin, but many in the LGBTQ+ community still worry about infection. Whether your dating, hooking up or just curious about healthy dating practices during the pandemic, this free 6:30 p.m. discussion might hold some answers. Hosted by FORGE, the panel takes place via ZOOM. Visit https://forge-forward.zoom.us/j/92745710374 (Meeting ID 927 4571 0374) to participate.

Have a question for Ruthie? Want to share an event with her? Contact Ruthie at DearRuthie@ShepEx.com.

Milwaukee LGBTQ Sports Update – Shepherd Express

With an enthusiastic, “Get Out! Be Safe! Play Ball!” SSBL (Saturday Softball Beer League), Milwaukee’s LGBTQ softball league, announced its 2021 season of play. After last year’s hiatus due to COVID-19, the news comes as yet another sign of the ebbing of pandemic restrictions and a return to relative normalcy.

Doing its part for safe participation, and in deference to the current state of CDC and local health department recommendations, SSBL offers players wrist bands to clearly identify an individual’s social distancing comfort level. A green band indicates the wearer is comfortable with high-fives and handshakes (with frequent hand washing). A yellow band means still cautious “elbows only” contact only, while a red band signifies “no contact” with no exemptions to six feet apart social distancing.

According to SSBL Commissioner Kurt Baldwin, SSBL has also introduced a new innovation for its team sponsors, namely a waiver of sponsorship fees. The new policy recognizes the financial hardships brought upon the bars due to COVID-19. Sponsoring SSBL teams since the league’s founding in 1977, Milwaukee’s LGBTQ bars have managed to survive over a year of minimal income, some relying on fund raising campaigns to compensate employees, pay rent and ride out the storm. SSBL’s own fundraising mechanism, volunteering to staff an American Family Field concession stand at Brewer’s games, will be dedicated to covering those costs.

SSBL’s schedule begins June 12 with all games played at Wilson Park (S. 13th Street and West Howard Ave). Nine teams are currently on the roster. Prospective team sponsors have until June 1 to register a team.

Games Underway

Meanwhile, games are already underway. SSBL’s traveling team played in Madison where it is part of that city’s league. Three SSBL teams will participate in the annual Memorial Day Tournament, the North Star Classic, held in Minneapolis, and will be in Madison for a Fourth of July tournament.

Milwaukee Metro Tennis Club (MMTC) 2021 Tennis season is in the offing as well. Two hit around/rating sessions will be held at Wick Field (N. 46th and W. Vliet Streets) on May 30 and June 6 (11 a.m.-1 p.m. on both days). League play lasts eight weeks.  It starts on June 13 and continues through August 8 (except Fourth of July weekend). MMTC’s player fee is $65 for the season.

Founded in 2018, Cream City’s newest LGBTQ sports team, the Milwaukee Beer Barons Rugby Football Club, returned to the pitch earlier in May. A member of the International Gay Rugby and of the Wisconsin Rugby Football Union, the Beer Barons Club welcomes individuals of any experience level, age, race or sexual orientation who identify as a male.

MGVA (Milwaukee Gay Volleyball Association) returns this season with Summer Sand Open Play began May 19 at the Beulah Brinton Sand Courts in Bay View. The Milwaukee Gay Football Club is returning to the field as well. It announced its Tuesday Night Soccer season opening June 8.  Registration for its Blue Light Special soccer team takes place until May 31.

Information, registration and other details for each organization may be found on their respective social media page or website.

Daniel Howell opens up about mental health and taking break from his YouTube channel – Yahoo News

The Daily Beast

35 Republicans Defy Trump and GOP Leaders to Push Capitol Riots Probe

Alex WongOver the objections of GOP leaders, the House passed a bill Wednesday that would create a bipartisan and independent commission to examine the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.The House voted 252-175, with 35 Republicans joining all Democrats in support of the bill.With 35 House Republicans voting for the commission, there’s a possibility Democrats in the Senate can find enough Republicans there to support the panel, but the odds are long. While the number of GOP defections is a bit of an embarrassment for Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) and his leadership team, it’s probably not quite the jailbreak that Democrats needed to convince their Senate colleagues to go against Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY). Democrats would need 10 Republicans to overcome a GOP filibuster for 60 votes in the Senate, otherwise the bill establishing the commission won’t make it to President Joe Biden’s desk.Still, Democrats found themselves surprised at the number of GOP defections. “That’s a good showing,” Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff (D-CA) told The Daily Beast. “It should be everyone. But given the death grip Donald Trump has on his party, I think it’s encouraging.”Debate in the House on Wednesday was mostly one-sided. More Republicans spoke in support of the commission than those who spoke against it. But the GOP arguments against the legislation were particularly divorced from reality.Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX) implored Democrats to start being bipartisan and stop using “every tool as a partisan stick to beat Republicans.”“Look, things have changed a lot since the 9/11 commission,” Gohmert said, “because back then, we did not have a problem on both—either side of the aisle condemning anti-semitic remarks.”Fellow Texas Republican Rep. Chip Roy argued that an independent commission was unnecessary because Congress already has committees that could subpoena people and investigate Jan. 6.“Let’s use the powers that we have and the powers of this body and the committees we have to seek the truth to the information wherever it may lead,” Roy said.But Democrats and some Republicans contended that an independent and high-profile commission—like the one Congress created after 9/11—was an important step toward accountability and future safety.Schiff invoked that example to justify the Jan. 6 commission. He told The Daily Beast that Congress did important work to probe 9/11 but that the commission brought “tremendous added value” because it was outside the political process and was staffed with trusted figures.“That’s what we need here, so that the recommendations that come out of the commission will be broadly accepted by the public,” Schiff said.House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) particularly took offense to the GOP contention that the commission ought to broaden its scope to all sorts of political violence, not just the violence that occurred on Jan. 6.“It’s vital that Congress establish a bipartisan, independent commission to investigate January 6. Not some other date,” Hoyer said. “That does not absolve any wrongdoing anywhere, any time. But it says that this unique insurrection is a danger to our democracy. Not to Republicans and Democrats. To our democracy. To our Congress. To the people’s House and the United States Senate, which was occupied.”Rep. John Katko (R-NY)—the top Republican on the Homeland Security Committee who brokered the deal—also spoke in support of the bill, saying an independent commission was “critical for removing the politics around January 6.”“The American people and the Capitol Police deserve answers and action as soon as possible to ensure that nothing like this ever happens again,” Katko said. “We must find answers to the many questions surrounding that day.”All of this drama to create a bipartisan commission comes after four months of negotiations and a flurry of recent opposition from GOP leaders.After Katko finalized a deal with Homeland Security Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-MS) last week to create the commission, McCarthy promptly blew it up on Tuesday.And although McConnell said later in the day on Tuesday that he was undecided, he woke up on Wednesday and himself called the proposal “slanted and unbalanced.”The only thing that had seemed to change was that former President Donald Trump issued a statement Tuesday night calling the commission “partisan unfairness.”While McConnell and Republican allies tried to come up with reasons on Wednesday why that was the case, their rationales didn’t seem to match up with the legislation.The bill that the House passed Wednesday would create an independent commission composed of 10 people outside of government—five to be picked by Democratic leaders, and five to be picked by Republican leaders. The commission would have subpoena power, but only if the Democratic chair and GOP vice chair agreed, or absent that agreement, if a majority of the commission approved.The one item of imbalance Republicans focused on Wednesday was the composition of the staff, which also seemed to be a mostly imagined complaint. The language for hiring staff was almost identical to the bipartisan 9/11 commission, as well as a bill from January establishing an independent commission that had more than 30 GOP cosponsors.But not long after McConnell’s speech against the legislation Wednesday, those senators who had been undecided, or even supportive, changed their tune.Sen. Mike Rounds (R-SD), who said on Tuesday that the insurrection could not be “swept under any rug,” said on Wednesday that he’d changed his mind after hearing directly from McCarthy. “Leadership in the House says it’s not bipartisan in nature,” Rounds said, even though the bill was the product of negotiations between Katko and Thompson—with McCarthy’s backing.After Trump, McCarthy, and McConnell all came out in opposition to the commission, GOP leaders began explicitly laying out a key concern that’s percolated for weeks: that such a commission would damage them politically. “A lot of our members, and I think this is true of a lot of House Republicans, want to be moving forward and not looking backward,” said Sen. John Thune (R-SD), the No. 2 Republican in the Senate. “Anything that gets us rehashing the 2020 elections I think is a day lost on being able to draw a contrast between us and the Democrats’ very radical left-wing agenda.”The 10 Republican votes needed to pass the bill in the Senate, then, will now be much tougher for Democrats to win. Even senators who would be the building blocks of any bipartisan vote, like Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), have said they want to see changes to the commission as it is structured.The Senate GOP’s widespread opposition potentially sets up something momentous: the minority’s first use of the legislative filibuster since Democrats took power in January. The symbolism in such a move is not lost on Democrats. Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA) told The Daily Beast such a move would be in line with the GOP’s intent to filibuster voting rights legislation. “They’re just interested in blocking,” he said.Democrats on both sides of the Capitol say they will plow ahead though, even if the path to establishing the commission is unclear. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) vowed on Wednesday to put the House’s bill to a vote, no matter what. And Hoyer told reporters that Democrats would find a lane for the review somehow—even if it meant creating a special committee in the House.That would be a far more diminished version of the commission outlined in the bill, however.Republicans have pointed to ongoing reviews of the Jan. 6 attack being conducted by congressional committees and various agencies from the federal government, saying their work would be more than sufficient in uncovering what happened and how to prevent it from happening again.But Rep. Tim Ryan (R-OH), who chairs the House committee that oversees the Capitol Police, said Wednesday that would not be enough. “We’re trying to govern the country, so we’re trying to set this up,” Ryan said. “If there’s something better, be a part of it.”“If we can’t get Republican votes on this,” Ryan added, “it’s indicative of what’s to come.”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.

McCarthy Sets Wednesday Vote on Ouster of Liz Cheney – The New York Times

Representative Elise Stefanik of New York is seeking to become the No. 3 House Republican.
Credit…Erik S Lesser/EPA, via Shutterstock

Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, the top House Republican, on Monday defended his move to oust Representative Liz Cheney of Wyoming as the party’s No. 3 leader, portraying the purge of the most powerful Republican critic of Donald J. Trump as the forward-looking move of a “big tent party.”

In a letter to colleagues announcing a Wednesday vote to “recall” Ms. Cheney, Mr. McCarthy said her ouster was necessary to overcome “internal divisions” that could derail the party’s efforts to reclaim the House majority in 2022. Even as he argued for getting rid of Ms. Cheney, who has angered others in the G.O.P. with her refusal to stay silent in the face of Mr. Trump’s election lies, Mr. McCarthy insisted that Republicans “embrace free thought and debate.”

“Each day spent relitigating the past is one day less we have to seize the future,” Mr. McCarthy wrote. “If we are to succeed in stopping the radical Democrat agenda from destroying our country, these internal conflicts need to be resolved so as to not detract from the efforts on our collective team.”

The statement was an attempt to pre-emptively deflect criticism of a messy intraparty conflict that Mr. McCarthy is well aware could alienate some voters who are eager to move past Mr. Trump and his false election claims. It also threatens to undermine the party’s efforts to avoid talking about the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol by a mob inspired by the myth of a stolen election.

The letter came a day after Mr. McCarthy officially endorsed Representative Elise Stefanik of New York to replace Ms. Cheney. Despite initially running for Congress as a mainstream Republican moderate, Ms. Stefanik became one of Mr. Trump’s most vociferous defenders in the House, and in recent months has revived his false election claims, which have become a central element of her campaign to replace Ms. Cheney.

While Ms. Stefanik has emerged as a favorite of party leaders to serve in the No. 3 post, there were signs on Monday that hard-right Republican lawmakers might not be willing to go along. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, who has promoted Mr. Trump’s false charges of a stolen election and said before the riot that Jan. 6 was a “1776 moment,” wrote on Twitter that Republicans should take “a break before we vote on a replacement.”

“Options are good and so are conservative votes,” wrote Ms. Greene, who elevated violent conspiracy theories before she was elected to Congress. She echoed the concerns of some members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, who have privately groused that Ms. Stefanik only recently became a Trump acolyte.

But Mr. McCarthy was working to paper over the rifts.

“We represent Americans of all backgrounds and continue to grow our movement by the day,” he wrote. “And unlike the left, we embrace free thought and debate.”

Credit…Anna Moneymaker/The New York Times

Ms. Cheney does not plan to contest the recall vote, but she has promised to sharpen her argument that fealty to Mr. Trump will ultimately drag down the Republican Party. A small but outspoken coterie of Republicans is providing backup.

“Expelling Liz Cheney from leadership won’t gain the GOP one additional voter, but it will cost us quite a few,” Senator Mitt Romney, Republican of Utah and the party’s 2012 nominee for president, warned on Twitter.

Representative Adam Kinzinger, Republican of Illinois, pointed out that Mr. McCarthy had initially said Mr. Trump bore responsibility for the Capitol riot — only to later insist that others stop talking about it.

“She is being run out for one thing: her consistency,” Mr. Kinzinger said of Ms. Cheney during a National Press Club event on Monday. “You cannot unite with lies.”

Senator Joni Ernst, Republican of Iowa, suggested that House Republicans were trying to silence Ms. Cheney for her beliefs.

“It’s OK to go ahead and express what you feel is right,” she told reporters at the Capitol. “Cancel culture is cancel culture, no matter how you look at it.”

Holding tanks operate by Colonial Pipeline in Woodbine, Md., on Monday. The company said it hoped to have a pipeline that carries petroleum from the Texas Gulf Coast to New York Harbor running again by the end of this week.
Credit…Drone Base, via Reuters

President Biden said on Monday that the United States would “disrupt and prosecute” a criminal gang of hackers called DarkSide, which the F.B.I. formally blamed for a huge ransomware attack that has disrupted the flow of nearly half of the gasoline and jet fuel supplies to the East Coast.

The F.B.I., clearly concerned that the ransomware effort could spread, issued an emergency alert to electric utilities, gas suppliers and other pipeline operators to be on the lookout for code like the kind that locked up Colonial Pipelines, a private firm that controls the major pipeline carrying gasoline, diesel and jet fuel from the Texas Gulf Coast to New York Harbor.

The pipeline remained offline for a fourth day on Monday as a pre-emptive measure to keep the malware that infected the company’s computer networks from spreading to the control systems that run the pipeline. So far, the effects on gasoline and other energy supplies seem minimal, and Colonial said it hoped to have the pipeline running again by the end of this week.

According to intelligence officials, all of the indications are that the episode was simply an act of extortion by the group, which first began to deploy such ransomware last August, and is believed to operate from Eastern Europe, possibly Russia.

Mr. Biden, who is expected to announce an executive order in the coming days to strengthen America’s cyberdefenses, said he planned to meet with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia soon and he suggested Moscow bore some responsibility because DarkSide is believed to have roots in Russia and the country provides a haven for cybercriminals. Mr. Biden and Mr. Putin are expected to hold their first summit next month.

On Monday, DarkSide argued it was not operating on behalf of a nation state, perhaps in an effort to distance itself from Russia.

“We are apolitical, we do not participate in geopolitics, do not need to tie us with a defined government and look for our motives,” said a statement posted on DarkSide’s website. “Our goal is to make money and not creating problems for society.”

Colonial’s pipelines feed large storage tanks up and down the East Coast, and supplies seem plentiful, in part because of reduced traffic during the pandemic. Colonial issued a statement on Monday saying its goal was to “substantially” resume service by the end of the week, but the company cautioned that the process would take time.

Elizabeth Sherwood-Randall, Mr. Biden’s homeland security adviser and a former deputy secretary of energy in the Obama administration, said that the Energy Department was leading the federal response and had “convened the oil and natural gas and electric sector utility partners to share details about the ransomware attack and discuss recommended measures to mitigate further incidents across the industry.”

Receiving a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine at a mass vaccination site in East Hartford, Conn., last month.
Credit…Jessica Hill/Associated Press

The Food and Drug Administration on Monday authorized use of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine for 12- to 15-year-olds in the United States, a crucial step in the nation’s steady recovery from the pandemic and a boon to tens of millions of American families eager for a return to normalcy.

The authorization caps weeks of anticipation among parents, who have been grappling with how to conduct their lives when only the adults in a household are immunized. It removes an obstacle to school reopenings by reducing the threat of transmission in classrooms, and affords millions of adolescents the opportunity to attend summer camps, sleepovers and get-togethers with friends.

“This is great news,” said Dr. Kristin Oliver, a pediatrician and vaccine expert at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. “It feels like we’ve been waiting a long time to start protecting children in this age group.” The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is already available to anyone over 16.

The F.D.A.’s go-ahead is not the final hurdle. An advisory committee of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is expected to meet shortly to review the data and make recommendations for the vaccine’s use in 12- to 15-year-olds.

If the committee endorses the vaccine for that age group, as expected, immunizations in theory could begin immediately. Clinical trials have shown that these children may safely receive the dose already available for adults.

In a clinical trial, Pfizer and BioNTech enrolled 2,260 participants ages 12 and 15 and gave them either two doses of the vaccine or a placebo three weeks apart. The researchers recorded 18 cases of symptomatic coronavirus infection in the placebo group, and none among the children who received the vaccine, indicating that it was highly effective at preventing symptomatic illness.

The vaccine also appeared to be safe for these children, with side effects comparable to those seen in trial participants who are 16 to 25 years old. Fevers were slightly more common among inoculated 12- to 15-year-olds; about 20 percent of them had fevers, compared with 17 percent in the older age group.

The trend toward more fevers at younger ages was consistent with observations in an earlier trial, said Dr. Bill Gruber, a senior vice president at Pfizer and a pediatrician.

The trial results were a “trifecta” of good news, Dr. Gruber added: “We have safety, we got the immune response we wanted — it was actually better than what we saw in the 16- to 25-year-old population — and we had outright demonstration of efficacy.”

The company is still gathering information on potential asymptomatic infections by continuing to test the trial participants for the coronavirus every two weeks and checking them for antibodies produced in response to a natural infection, according to Dr. Gruber.

The push to immunize children may run into the same problems with hesitancy that have plagued attempts to inoculate adults. In one recent poll, just over half of parents said they were likely to have their children get a vaccine as soon as one was authorized.

Dr. Megan Ranney, an emergency room physician at Rhode Island Hospital in Providence, said she had “zero safety concerns” about the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, noting that hundreds of millions of people worldwide have received it.

Her 12-year-old daughter is eager to be vaccinated, and her 9-year-old son will be immunized as soon as he is eligible, she said.

“The risk of your child catching Covid and getting really sick is low, but it’s not zero,” she said. “And the risk of them getting sick or hospitalized or worse with Covid or with the post-Covid multi-inflammatory syndrome is higher than the risk of something bad from this vaccine.”

Vaccinating children shields others in the community from the virus, she noted, including people who are not protected by the vaccine, such as organ transplant recipients, cancer patients and those with impaired immune responses.

“It also protects all of us from the virus continuing to spread and mutating further,” Dr. Ranney said. “That’s the thing that I’m most scared of right now.”

Pfizer and BioNTech began testing the vaccine in children ages 5 to 11 in March and extended the trial to even younger children, ages 2 to 5, last month. The companies next plan to test children who are 6 months to 2 years old.

Assuming trial results are encouraging, the companies expect to apply to the F.D.A. in September for emergency authorization to administer the vaccine to children ages 2 to 11.

Results from trials of Moderna’s vaccine in 12- to 17-year-olds are expected in the next few weeks. Findings from another trial of the company’s vaccine in children 6 months to 12 years old should be available in the second half of this year.

AstraZeneca is testing its vaccine in children 6 months and older. Johnson & Johnson plans to wait for results from trials in participants older than 12 before testing its vaccine in younger children.

Jan Hoffman contributed reporting.

Gov. Gavin Newsom at a news conference on Monday. If his plan for a state tax rebate is approved, it would be the largest in U.S. history.
Credit…Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group, via Associated Press

Riding a breathtaking and exquisitely timed $75.7 billion surplus, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday proposed putting $600 in the pockets of two-thirds of California taxpayers in a state rebate that if approved would be the largest in U.S. history.

The proposal, one in a series the governor plans to make this week in his annual budget revision, takes advantage of a remarkable turnaround in the state’s financial picture that comes not only as California emerges from the coronavirus pandemic, but also as Mr. Newsom works to defuse an expected recall election.

Mr. Newsom’s motivation is not entirely political: Rebate payments are required by May 2023 under the provisions of a 1979 state spending limit. That law, passed by voters as part of a tax revolt that swept the state, calls for a taxpayer rebate if per capita spending, adjusted to account for growth, exceeds a certain level for two consecutive years.

In less than a year, the state’s financial picture has swung from bust to boom, thanks largely to California’s tax system, which relies heavily on the kind of higher-income workers who were able to work from home and thus keep their jobs during the pandemic.

The state cashed in not only on income taxes but on taxes on capital gains from the booming stock market as investments made affluent Californians wealthier and as a number of California-based start-ups went public. That rebound, along with a $26 billion infusion of federal stimulus money, sent the state budget soaring.

“California is not just back — California is roaring back,” Mr. Newsom, a Democrat, said on Monday in a news conference in Oakland, where he appeared with the chairs of the state budget committees and ignored questions about the recall.

California was among many states that initially predicted that the pandemic would be catastrophic for budgets, but many of those projections have become less dire in recent months. A report by the National Conference of State Legislatures found that more than 30 states have revised their revenue forecasts upward from the start of the pandemic, allowing some to revisit cuts they previously made.

A handful, including Idaho, have proposed their own form of stimulus or tax relief, but none approximating the scope and scale of Mr. Newsom’s plan.

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‘Moving in the Right Direction,’ Biden Says of Economic Growth

On Monday, President Biden gave an update on the economic outlook for the country after a disappointing monthly jobs report on Friday. The president maintained in his speech that economic growth was continuing, despite pandemic losses.

As we learned Friday, the economy created 266,000 jobs in April. In fact, altogether, since the time we took office, we’ve created more than 1.5 million jobs in the country. It’s the most jobs created in the first 100 days of any president on record. We’re moving in the right direction. So let’s be clear: Our economic plan is working. I never said, and no serious analyst ever suggested, that climbing out of the deep, deep hole our economy was in would be simple, easy, immediate or perfectly steady. Remember, 22 million Americans lost their jobs in this pandemic. So some months will exceed expectations, others will fall short. The question is: What is the trend line? Are we headed in the right direction? Are we taking the right steps to keep it going? And the answer clearly is yes.

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On Monday, President Biden gave an update on the economic outlook for the country after a disappointing monthly jobs report on Friday. The president maintained in his speech that economic growth was continuing, despite pandemic losses.CreditCredit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

President Biden ordered the Labor Department on Monday to ensure that unemployed Americans cannot draw enhanced federal jobless benefits if they turn down a suitable job offer, even as he rejected claims by Republicans that his weekly unemployment bonus is undermining efforts to get millions of Americans back to work.

Stung from a weekend of criticism over a disappointing April jobs report, Mr. Biden struck a defiant tone, seeking to make clear that he expects workers to return to jobs if they are available, while defending his signature economic policy effort thus far and blaming corporate America, in part, for not doing more to entice people to go back to work.

The president told reporters at the White House that child care constraints, school closures and fears of contracting the coronavirus had hindered job creation last month, and he challenged companies to help workers gain access to vaccines and to raise their pay.

“The last Congress, before I became president, gave businesses over $1.4 trillion in Covid relief,” Mr. Biden said. “Congress may have approved that money, but let’s be clear: The money came from the American people, and it went from the American people to American businesses, many of them big businesses, to help them get through this pandemic and keep their doors open.”

He added, “My expectation is that, as our economy comes back, these companies will provide fair wages and safe work environments.” He said that if they did, “they’ll find plenty of workers, and we’re all going to come out of this together better than before.”

Mr. Biden also promised more relief was working its way into the economy through measures created by the $1.9 trillion “American Rescue Plan” that the president signed into law in March. That includes help for child care providers and aid for state and local governments that Treasury Department officials began to make available on Monday.

Mr. Biden is trying to win support for even more federal spending, including a $2.3 trillion jobs proposal centered on physical infrastructure.

Republicans have criticized Mr. Biden for the disappointing jobs numbers. In particular, they blamed a provision in his rescue plan that extended a $300-per-week federal supplement for unemployed Americans for discouraging Americans from returning to work.

Senator Ben Sasse, Republican of Nebraska, said on Monday that Mr. Biden was “all over the place” on the issue.

“He wants to go after folks who are gaming the system, but he’s denying the reality that his policies are making the situation worse, so he’s trying to make struggling businesses the boogeymen,” Mr. Sasse said in a news release. “Here’s the deal: Bad federal policy is making unemployment pay more than work, and millions of jobs aren’t getting filled.”

Supporters of L.G.B.T.Q. rights protested outside the White House in 2017.  
Credit…Justin Gilliland/The New York Times

The Biden administration announced on Monday that health care providers could not discriminate against gay and transgender individuals, the latest step in President Biden’s efforts to restore civil rights protections for L.G.B.T.Q. people that were eliminated by his predecessor.

Under the new policy, the Department of Health and Human Services will once again prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity by health care organizations that receive federal funding.

The move will begiin to reverse a policy adopted by the department under President Donald J. Trump that said anti-discrimination provisions of the Affordable Care Act of 2010 did not apply to transgender people. That change had been hailed by social conservatives and harshly criticized by gay rights supporters.

“Fear of discrimination can lead individuals to forgo care, which can have serious negative health consequences,” Xavier Becerra, Mr. Biden’s health secretary, said in a statement. “It is the position of the Department of Health and Human Services that everyone — including L.G.B.T.Q. people — should be able to access health care, free from discrimination or interference, period.”

The shift is part of a broader effort by the president to include lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and questioning people — and particularly transgender individuals — in protections against discrimination. In his first address to a joint session of Congress last month, Mr. Biden pledged his support for the Equality Act, which would expand civil rights laws to include sexual orientation and gender identity.

“To all transgender Americans watching at home, especially the young people: You’re so brave,” Mr. Biden said in his speech. “I want you to know your president has your back.”

Administration officials said the new policy was required by a Supreme Court ruling last summer that said civil rights laws protect L.G.B.T.Q. workers from employment discrimination.

But Monday’s action does not fully reverse the Trump administration’s interpretation of the law. It encourages people who believe they have been discriminated against to bring complaints to the federal government. Biden administration officials said they were working to write more complete new regulations on the civil rights provision of the law, known as Section 1557, that will specify which health care institutions are subject to the rules and what sorts of services they will be required to provide.

“It is really difficult and challenging with these state laws that are targeting trans youth,” said Dr. Rachel Levine, the assistant health secretary and the Biden administration’s highest-ranking transgender official. “There is a disconnect between these laws and our interpretation of 1557 in terms of preventing discrimination against these kids. There will need to be legal analysis about that inconsistency.”

Credit…Associated Press/NORC

President Biden enjoys widespread job approval, as Americans’ optimism about the future continues to climb, according to a poll released Monday by The Associated Press and NORC.

Sixty-three percent of Americans said they approved of the work Biden was doing as president, while just 36 percent disapproved. That spread of 27 percentage points represents the widest approval margin in an A.P./NORC poll since Mr. Biden took office.

The president continued to receive broadly positive marks for his handling of the coronavirus pandemic, with seven in 10 respondents expressing approval. His approach to health care policy got a thumbs-up from 62 percent of Americans, and 54 percent approved of his work on foreign policy.

Fifty-seven percent of Americans said they approved of the job he was doing on the economy, while just 42 percent disapproved — although the poll was conducted from April 29 to May 3, before the administration released a disappointing April jobs report showing that the country was missing its targets on employment.

With migrants continuing to arrive at the southern border in high numbers, the poll found that just 43 percent of Americans approved of Mr. Biden’s handling of immigration. Fifty-four percent disapproved.

But for the first time in A.P./NORC polling going back four years, a majority of Americans said that the country was headed in the right direction — possibly driven in part by the decline in coronavirus cases nationwide.

Fifty-four percent of respondents said things were going right in the country, while 44 percent said things were on the wrong track. That shift is being fed by a rise in optimism among political independents: Nearly half of them said that things were moving in the right direction, according to the poll.

Since January, the A.P./NORC poll has consistently found at least six in 10 Americans approving of the president’s job performance, putting it on the more Biden-friendly end of the polling spectrum. (NORC polls are conducted using its probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, with most respondents completing the survey online and a small number contacted by phone.) But polling averages consistently show Mr. Biden’s approval rating over 50 percent.

Roman Khan, at a refugee camp in Pakistan, holding a photograph of his brother Asadullah Haroon Gul, who is challenging his detention by the United States at Guantánamo Bay.
Credit…Abdul Majeed/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

A Justice Department lawyer said in federal court on Monday that, even as the Pentagon is withdrawing all troops from Afghanistan, the United States can continue to detain a former Afghan militia member at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, because of his past association with members of Al Qaeda.

“We remain at war with Al Qaeda,” the lawyer, Stephen M. Elliott, said in U.S. District Court in Washington in a case brought by Asadullah Haroon Gul, an Afghan citizen who has been held by the U.S. military since 2007.

The hearing was the first in a Guantánamo habeas corpus case since President Biden took office. The administration’s defense of Mr. Haroon’s detention appeared identical to the positions taken by previous administrations, despite Mr. Biden’s order to withdraw all U.S. combat troops from Afghanistan and his stated ambition to close the Guantánamo prison.

Mr. Haroon, who is about 40, was captured by Afghan forces while serving as a commander of the Hezb-i-Islami militia, which fought the American and allied invasion of Afghanistan along with the Taliban and Al Qaeda.

His lawyers argue that his war ended in 2016 when the militia made peace with the U.S.-allied Afghan government of President Ashraf Ghani. The foreign ministry of Afghanistan has filed a brief in the case seeking his return.

From left, Eliana Lord, Carly Mihovich, Stephanie Justice and Nick Hansen, visiting from Columbia, S.C., took a photo at Lafayette Park on Monday.
Credit…Andrew Harnik/Associated Press

Portions of Lafayette Square, the park in the shadow of the White House, reopened on Monday, more than 11 months after violent clashes there between protesters and law enforcement.

The park, which sits on the north side of the White House, had been fenced off to the public in June, days after William P. Barr, then the attorney general, ordered officials to clear the park of people protesting the police killings of George Floyd and other Black men. Shortly after the authorities used riot-control methods to disperse the protesters, President Donald J. Trump strode across Lafayette Square to pose in front of a church that had been damaged by fire the evening before.

In the months after the conflict, black metal fencing that had been quickly erected around the park became an impromptu memorial and art space.

On Monday, the Secret Service did not say why the park had been opened to pedestrians and bicyclists.

“In protecting the White House and its residents, the U.S. Secret Service acknowledges that the surrounding area can be a powerful symbol of our nation and our democracy, and the agency is committed to balancing necessary security measures with the importance of public access and view,” the agency said in a statement. “Due to the need to maintain operational security, we do not discuss the specifics of security fencing or other operational means and methods.”

The National Park Service referred questions to White House officials, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Pennsylvania Avenue, the thoroughfare that separates the White House from the park and is usually populated by tourists, protesters and government employees, remains closed.

Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, had said that President Biden wanted the wide security perimeter around the complex to be reduced.

“Our goal, the president and the vice president’s goal, is for the Secret Service to adjust the perimeter as soon as it makes sense from an overall security standpoint,” Ms. Psaki said in early February. “So we’re working closely with them on that, and they are — of course, would be in the lead on that front.”

Some States Are Doing What The Federal Government Won’t: Giving Veterans Benefits To Gay Ex-Troops – KPBS

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Former Navy sailor Louis Miller stands on the deck of the USS Enterprise airc...

Credit: Louis Miller

Above: Former Navy sailor Louis Miller stands on the deck of the USS Enterprise aircraft carrier. Miller was kicked out of the Navy in 1992 for being gay.

Gay and lesbian military members have been able to serve openly since 2011, when Congress repealed the controversial “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy.

But for some who were expelled for being gay before the repeal, their less-than-honorable discharge status means they can’t access vital veterans benefits. Advocates for LGBT service members estimate as many as 114,000 were discharged for being gay between World War II and 2011.

Listen to this story by The American Homefront Project.

Now, states are passing laws to expand benefits to LGBT veterans.

Rhode Island, New York, and Colorado are among the states that recently have restored state military benefits. Several other states are considering similar legislation.

“This needs to be corrected at the federal level as well,” said Colorado State Senator Dominick Moreno, “but at least at the state level we were able to create this classification that if you are an LGBT veteran, and you received an other-than-honorable discharge because of your sexual orientation or gender identity, then you deserve access to all of those state benefits.”

Moreno, a Democrat, helped write a new law that restores state benefits like education opportunities and military burials. But that still leaves major benefits – like full VA health care and the GI bill – out of reach. States cannot upgrade military discharges on their own.

“Ultimately, it’s really a federal issue – particularly if people are seeking health care under TRICARE or if they’re seeking all those other benefits – that needs to happen at the federal level,” Moreno said.

Congress has considered a federal version of the state bills several times. It would offer blanket discharge upgrades to most veterans who were kicked out. But the measure hasn’t gone anywhere.

“We’ve been fighting this fight for a really long time,” said Jennifer Dane, Executive Director of the Modern Military Association of America, an advocacy group for LGBT service members. “It gets to the Ways and Means Committee, and it comes back usually that it’s too expensive.”

In Colorado, legislators who voted against the state law had other problems with extending benefits to veterans with less-than-honorable discharges.

Republican Representative Richard Holtorf argued on the House floor that it would undercut discharge decisions the military has already made. And, Holtorf said, rules are rules.

“The expectation for all service members is that you will follow general orders, you will follow command policy and command directives, you will follow the UCMJ as it is written at the time of the service,” Holtorf said.

That argument doesn’t work for Ashton Stewart. He runs a program called SAGEVets, helping older LGBT veterans in New York get access to benefits.

“Legislators are hiding behind the integrity issue,” Stewart said. “It’s because they don’t want to address the issue that’s really happening here, which is discrimination.”

Photo caption:

Stewart helped craft New York’s “Restoration of Honor” law. He hopes that as more states pass similar laws, the federal government will be pressured to make the same changes.

Former Navy sailor Louis Miller from Bronx, N.Y., was kicked out for being gay in 1992. He said he didn’t try to upgrade his other-than-honorable discharge until recently.

“I knew I was fighting a losing battle,” Miller said. “I didn’t try, because I knew I couldn’t win.”

But when Miller applied for state veterans benefits in New York, he got one of the first approvals after the state law took effect last year.

“[The military] gave me a bad piece of paper, but you can’t take away what I did there,” Miller said. “You can’t take away my honor. What you took away was my recognition of it. The restoration of honor in New York state, that’s what it does: it gives me some recognition.”

And, it opens up access to dozens of state veterans benefits like tuition assistance and property tax breaks.

Miller said he’s always been proud of his service, and now he’s proud that New York State recognizes it, too.

This story is part of our American Homefront Project, a public media collaboration on in-depth military coverage with funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and The Patriots Connection.

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LGBT cops slam NYC Pride for banning law enforcement from marching – ChicagoPride.com

Heritage of Pride, organizers of NYC Pride—announced Saturday that it will ban police and corrections officers from marching as a group in the annual Pride parade on June 27 and through 2025.

The policy was meant to protect the dignity, pride, and respect of persons of color, transgender, and indigenous Americans who have a well-documented history of abuse at the hands of police and corrections officers in the U.S., according to the group.

This is especially true through the Black Lives Matter and Stop Asian Hate movements and increasing transgender attacks—and in the wake of Derek Chauvin’s guilty verdict in the murder of George Floyd.

“NYC Pride is unwilling to contribute in any way to creating an atmosphere of fear or harm for members of the community,” the group said.

But the effort was slammed by the Gay Officers Action League (GOAL) and its president Brian Downey, “The abrupt about-face in order to placate some of the activists in our community is shameful.”

“Heritage of Pride is well aware that the city would not allow a large scale event to occur without police presence. So their response to activist pressure is to take the low road by preventing their fellow community members from celebrating their identities and honoring the shared legacy of the Stonewall Riots,” Downey said in a statement.

NYC Pride said that it will utilize private security vendors and volunteers to maintain public safety during the parade and events.

It noted that the presence of NYPD is threatening to members of the LGBT community who view them as oppressors.

The organization believes this policy “challenges law enforcement to acknowledge their harm and to correct course moving forward.”

The Surprising Reason Why ‘Happy Endings’ Was Canceled – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Perhaps one of the most heartbreaking aspects of life for serial TV watchers is the dreaded moment one of your beloved shows gets canceled. TV shows can get canceled for a variety of reasons, some more predictable and sensible than others. One show that many were disappointed to hear was canceled was Happy Endings on ABC, which was discontinued after just three seasons. Learn more about the show and the surprising reason it was canceled below. 

What is ‘Happy Endings’?

Walt Disney Television via Getty Images's "Happy Endings" stars Zachary Knighton as Dave, Eliza Coupe as Jane, Damon Wayans, Jr. as Brad, Elisha Cuthbert as Alex, Adam Pally as Max and Casey Wilson as Penny.

Walt Disney Television via Getty Images’s “Happy Endings” stars Zachary Knighton as Dave, Eliza Coupe as Jane, Damon Wayans, Jr. as Brad, Elisha Cuthbert as Alex, Adam Pally as Max and Casey Wilson as Penny. | Craig Sjodin / Walt Disney Television via Getty Images via Getty Images

RELATED: A ‘Happy Endings’ Revival Could Be In The Works At ABC

Happy Endings is an American comedy show that aired on ABC for three seasons, from 2011 to 2013. The show was created by David Caspe, who later went on to create Marry Me, Champaign ILL, and Black Monday, and Jonathan Groff who had previously served as a producer on Scrubs and How I Met Your Mother

Happy Endings follows the story of six friends living in Chicago, whose friend group experiences a strain when one member of the group leaves another at the altar on their wedding day. The now ex-couple decides to try to remain friends to keep their friend group together. Each episode usually follows two plot lines that some or all of the characters are somehow involved in throughout. 

Many people compare Happy Endings to other shows revolving around a friend group, like How I Met Your Mother or Friends, though it did provide a fresh take and interesting shift in perspective throughout its three seasons. 

Who is in ‘Happy Endings’?

RELATED: ‘New Girl’: Why Did Damon Wayans Jr.’s Coach Leave in Season 1?

Happy Endings enjoyed a talented and dynamic cast filled with actors and actresses that would go on to do more amazing shows and movies.

According to IMDb, the cast included Damon Wayans Jr. as Brad Williams, who is married to Jane Kerkovich-Williams, played by Eliza Coupe. Brad and Jane are known to display plenty of affection in public, which tends to make the other friends of the group uncomfortable. Jane’s younger sister, Alex Kerkovich-Williams, is also a member of the friend group, and she is played by Elisha Cuthbert. 

Alex leaves Dave Rose Jr., played by Zachary Knighton, at the altar in the first episode. Adam Pally portrays Max Blum, a gay character that strays from the stereotypical depictions of gay men in other media. Finally, Casey Wilson plays Penny Hartz, a friend of Jane and Alex since childhood, who is trying to find her soulmate throughout the show. 

Happy Endings also managed to get quite a few notable guest stars, including Megan Mullally, Rob Corddry, and Damon Wayans. The cast clearly had incredible chemistry on screen, which is why many were surprised when it came to a sudden end after season 3. 

Why did the show get canceled?

RELATED: Who Is Adam Pally’s Wife?

According to Screen Rant, Happy Endings met its demise in 2013 because ABC Entertainment Chief Paul Lee believed it was “too narrow” of a show. This didn’t seem to make much sense at the time, as the show enjoyed commendable ratings and many found it to be a refreshing take on a modern-day friend group. 

After it was canceled, ABC took on two new comedies, Mixology and Super Fun Night, that Lee had deemed “broader,” but Mixology only lasted for 13 episodes, and Super Fun Night only made 17. Some believe Happy Endings never stood a fair chance, thanks to the network airing episodes in a non-consecutive way at different time slots and a major lack of promotion.

Even still, many fans still have hope that there could be a reboot or revival in the upcoming years, though according to Entertainment Tonight, Eliza Coupe remarked, “All of us would love that, [but] about 900 people need to sign off on that before it can happen.”

Is there a reboot in the future? Only time will tell. 

You No Longer Have To Quarantine After Traveling Into New Jersey – 94.5 PST

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Having to quarantine after coming from vacation was such a drag. The good thing is that in New Jersey you are not going to have to do that anymore.

According to NJ.com, the governor of the state of New Jersey has removed the quarantine rule. This is a good thing for me because I am going to Los Angeles to celebrate my mom’s birthday and was not looking forward to the whole quarantine thing.

We learned that the lift on travel advisory takes effect immediately.

For those that are against the COVID-19 vaccine, we have good news for you as well. It was stated on NJ.com that the new rule will work for those that are fully vaccinated as well as those that are not vaccinated. Not only that but those that are not New Jersey residents do not have to quarantine either.

Life is getting back to normal little by little.

Governor Murphy said, “We do encourage everyone to continue to exercise common sense when traveling domestically,” according to NJ.com.

NJ.com shared that those that are flying into the United States from a different country will be required to show a “negative COVID-19 test taken within three days of their departure or “proof of recovery from the virus within the last 90 days.”

This is all great news. Not having to quarantine after traveling has a lot to do with the big amount of New Jersey residents that have already gotten vaccinated. NJ.com made it known that the New Jersey goal is to have at least 70% of the residents vaccinated.

LOOK: The Most Famous Actor Born Every Year

Gay Twitter users show off their hairy chests to prove they aren’t ‘ick’ – PinkNews

After a Twitter user called hairy chests ‘ick’ queer men decided to do what they do best: Take their shirts off. Pictures Ltd./Corbis via Getty Images)

After a tweet that called hairy chests “ick” went viral, outraged queer men decided to respond by doing what they do best: Taking their shirts off.

On Monday (17 May), Twitter timelines quickly became rammed with Lourve-ready photos of men proudly showing off their gloriously hairy chests, all to squash body-shaming.

The relentlessly thirsty trend that is a modern-day act of Divine Providence took off after a Twitter user tweeted: “Hairy chests are a massive ick.”

We are once again reminding all 192 million daily active users that, sometimes, it’s perfectly fine not to tweet. Yes, really.

Soon enough, countless queer folk unbuttoned their striped Zara and H&M shirts – or took them off altogether – in defiance as they did their best Tom Selleck in Magnum PI impression.

Braving the body-shaming by bearing their beautifully hairy chests for the world (or at least, their followers) to see, users of all body types and looks sought to uplift one another and say it is perfectly OK to have body hair, or none at all.

And this even included RuPaul’s Drag Race UK‘s Crystal who said saying hairy chests are ick “is how to summon me”, which is very, very good to know.

As Grindr’s Twitter account, the poet of our generation, put it: “Hairy chests are hot.”

You heard it here first.

This certainly isn’t the first time that queer Twitter users have rallied against a take that they see as body-shaming.

In 2018, a user tweeted: “Dear gays with a waist larger than 32”, floral prints just aren’t for you, sis.

“Hust because Zara makes them in a XL doesn’t mean it’s for you.”

The backlash was swift. Hundreds of queer men dunked the user for their weird, gatekeeping opinion on, er, floral shirts.

“IGNORANT,” one user fumed. “I can wear floral, I can wear stripes, I can wear what I please because I love myself enough to not let people like you get me down.

“Don’t be mad that when I wear floral I end up looking like a whole beautiful tree & you don’t .”

To paraphrase the Spice Girls here: All you need is body positivity.

Gay Twitter users proudly show off their hairy chests to prove they aren’t ‘ick’ – Yahoo Eurosport UK

The Telegraph

Top Premier League clubs can find the cash for record Harry Kane deal, accountants say

The big English clubs all have “wiggle room” to table a record-breaking offer for Harry Kane while absorbing the financial chaos of Covid-19, according to accountants. While Manchester City and Chelsea have endless owner backing to rely upon, rivals such as Manchester United might rely on low interest rates and staggered instalments to get a £150-million deal done. A potential offer to dwarf even United’s £89.3 million deal for Paul Pogba would most likely involve a long-term repayment plan that could leave the buying club still forking out in 2026 or beyond. However, clubs are thought to be willing again to take such a long-term hit for such a prized asset as the financial outlook stabilises thanks to the domestic TV rollover deal and the return of crowds. Agents are convinced Daniel Levy’s determination to keep hold of Kane at Tottenham will be tested, and Kieran Maguire, a lecturer in football finance at Liverpool University, says the price tag may not be a stumbling block. “There is wiggle room in my view for a club the size of United to go into the market,” he added. United, he said, are a prime example of how “we are seeing the increasing use of longer term funding deals” even prior to the pandemic. “When Sir Alex Ferguson retired in 2013 they owed £34 million in outstanding instalments on transfers,” he explained. “Within five years that went up to £258 million, so Manchester United have been quite happy to use an instalment basis as a means of funding player acquisition. They’ve actually reduced that in the last two seasons – it’s now down to £132 million. So, if Spurs are willing to spread the cash coming in, then it’s feasible United could still come in with a big fee up front, perhaps half, and then [pay] the remainder in instalments.” The pandemic, he added, “shouldn’t prevent a club, such as Manchester United, going out into the market”. Deloitte estimates that over the course of 2019/20 and 2020/21, the top 20 earning clubs will have missed out on revenue totalling almost £2 billion as a result of the pandemic. However, while United saw the biggest decline in revenue last season, with a fall of more than £100 million, their long-term outlook is more stable than the likes of debt-ridden Real Madrid and Barcelona. Harry Kane’s next club – where would Tottenham talisman fit in best? James Begley, chief executive of talent marketplace Pickstar, told Telegraph Sport the pressures of the pandemic had made clubs “take stock”. “Any fee of that size is likely to be split across three or four annual instalments, and it would unlikely be for that full amount,” he added. “There may well be a string of performance bonuses tied in which brings the final sum closer to the £150 million mark, such as titles won, European success, goals, appearances, as well as a percentage of revenue tied into any future sell-on clause. It would be the biggest deal in English football, which given the sport’s post-pandemic financial landscape makes this even more extraordinary. But Kane is a proven goalscorer and a move to one of the biggest European clubs could well supercharge his own marketability.” Any deal to buy Kane would almost certainly be a long contract for the player, according to Maguire, a chartered accountant. “From a cash flow point of view, the costs can be spread, and from the accounting point of view, the costs are always spread over the life of the contract,” he added. “For a £150-million deal for Harry Kane, we may be talking 25 to £30 million pounds a year as far amortisation is approached in the accounts. As such, it [the pandemic] shouldn’t prevent a club, such as Manchester United, going out into the market.” Despite money extracted by the Glazer ownership, United, he explained, “do have a very good business model”. “Whilst they’ve had losses over the course of the last 15 months they should return to profitability next season, because they’re guaranteed a place in the Champions League,” he added. “And with fans back at Old Trafford, that’s worth £100 million a season to them in ticket sales.” United also have an overdraft facility which is now being paid at a rate of £25 million compared to more than £100 million in the early years of the Glazer ownership.

Apple Pride Watch Band: new edition has LGBT flag colours for first time – PinkNews

Dominique Morgan the first Black trans woman to sit on GLSEN’s national board, appears in the Apple Watch Pride Edition campaign. (Apple)

Apple has launched a new Pride Edition of the iconic Apple Watch, with a band that features the colours of the inclusive flag.

The Apple Watch Pride Edition 2021 incorporates black and brown stripes and the transgender flag colours for the first time ever.

It launched on 17 May to coincide with the International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia, and Biphobia (IDAHOT) and is available from the Apple website.

The bespoke rainbow-inspired strap is priced at £99, while customers can also get the watch in silver with the strap from £429.

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The initiative was first launched by Apple in 2016 to support LGBT+ causes across the US and for 2021 they wanted to better represent the breadth of the community.

The black and brown stripes symbolise Black and Latinx communities, while the light blue, pink and white stripes represent transgender and non-binary individuals.

Apple will donate proceeds to International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (IGLA), The Trevor Project, and LGBT+ youth charity GLSEN, a non-profit that works to ensure education is safe and affirming for all students across the US.

The new Apple Watch Pride Edition includes the inclusive Pride flag colours for the first time. (Apple)
The new Apple Watch Pride Edition includes the inclusive Pride flag colours for the first time. (Apple)

Dominique Morgan, the first Black trans woman and formerly incarcerated person to sit on GLSEN’s national board told Attitude: “These sort of relationships partnerships are powerful in ways that you can’t even explain.

“When you look at corporations like Apple that have a sort of power and influence to open hearts and minds to bring new information new ideas to people, it’s so important for those entities to understand the experiences of the most oppressed in our society.

“Looking at the work we’re doing with GLSEN it’s very clear that young people in our society are being faced with barriers to leading their own lives and engaging in the work of building their own futures.”

She also discusses Apple’s use of the inclusive Pride flag for the first time ever saying: “As someone who is 39 years-old – I came out when I was 13 – I’ve witnessed in my lifetime the evolution of the colours of the [Pride] flag.

“Our queer community is being identified and recognized [and] I think it’s just so important for everyone to see themselves.

“A colour theme is something simple, but the beautiful part about something being simple is that it’s an easy answer so seeing colours that represent Black, Brown, trans and non-conforming communities.

“[It] makes makes me stand up taller and makes my head look up higher.”

Other charities being supported by Apple include Encircle, Equality North Carolina, Equality Texas, Gender Spectrum, Human Rights Campaign, PFLAG National, the National Center for Transgender Equality, SMYAL, as well as ILGA World internationally.

To coincide with the launch Apple is also releasing a new matching animated Pride Woven watch face which can be downloaded for free on your iPhone.

As mentioned above, the braided solo loop strap is priced at £99, while the Apple Watch Pride Edition with the strap is priced from £429. They’re both available from the Apple website.

UNAIDS and its partners implement Partnership to Accelerate COVID-19 Testing in Madagascar – Mirage News

UNAIDS is partnering with the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) to support the roll-out of the Partnership to Accelerate COVID-19 Testing (PACT) in Africa, including Madagascar.

The PACT initiative, launched by the Africa CDC in April 2020, aims to conduct 10 million COVID-19 tests on the African continent. PACT has three pillars: test, trace and treat, which cover the procurement and distribution of COVID-19 test kits, the deployment and training of one million community health-care workers to support contact tracing and monitoring, and COVID-19 sensitization measures.

With funding from PACT, Madagascar is implementing a project to strengthen the engagement of civil society in the national COVID-19 response in the country. The first phase of the project has been initiated in six districts of the former province of Mahajanga, part of the Boeny region in south-west Madagascar.

Mahajanga has been chosen for the first phase because of its high HIV prevalence among key populations. According to a 2016 national survey, HIV prevalence is particularly high among sex workers, at 22.7% in 2016. As the former province is frequented by tourists, there are also concerns that another wave of COVID-19 may occur.

UNAIDS, the National AIDS Council, the Ministry of Health, at least 40 representatives of networks of people living with HIV and networks of lesbian gay, bisexual and transgender people (LGBT), a representative of the Mayor of Mahajanga and representatives of the health centre, local school and prisons attended a launch of the project. During the launch, 60 bottles of bleach were offered to the municipality to assist tuk-tuk drivers in Mahajanga with hygiene, as they and their passengers are at higher risk of COVID-19 infection.

Five community-led organizations have been identified to develop an implementation plan for the PACT project. The plan will be finalized after the results of a situational analysis of the impact of COVID-19 in the Boeny region are made available. The main recipients of the project are an estimated 136 000 people-people living with HIV, adolescents both in and out school, prisoners and key populations.

The project will engage local authorities and beneficiaries to contribute to effective implementation of the PACT project in Mahajanga and to the intensification of COVID-19 tests, with a particular emphasis on strengthening demand generation and contact tracing.

“We are proud to be among the seven African countries to receive funds to support the deployment of PACT,” said Jude Padayachy, the UNAIDS Country Director for Madagascar. “This project focuses on the COVID-19 response among people living with HIV, LGBT people, young people and adolescents, who have difficulty accessing care due to stigma and discrimination. No one should be left behind.”

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