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Visalia police searching for missing 76-year-old man – Yahoo News

The Daily Beast

Jeffrey Epstein Gave Bill Gates Advice on How to End ‘Toxic’ Marriage, Sources Say

Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast / Photo GettyBachelor sex-offender Jeffrey Epstein gave Bill Gates advice on ending his marriage with Melinda after the Microsoft co-founder complained about her during a series of meetings at the money manager’s mansion, according to two people familiar with the situation.Gates used the gatherings at Epstein’s $77 million New York townhouse as an escape from what he told Epstein was a “toxic” marriage, a topic both men found humorous, a person who attended the meetings told The Daily Beast.The billionaire met Epstein dozens of times starting in 2011 and continuing through to 2014 mostly at the financier’s Manhattan home—a substantially higher number than has been previously reported. Their conversations took place years before Bill and Melinda Gates announced this month that they were splitting up.Gates, in turn, encouraged Epstein to rehabilitate his image in the media following his 2008 guilty plea for soliciting a minor for prostitution, and discussed Epstein becoming involved with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.The people familiar with the matter said Gates found freedom in Epstein’s lair, where he met a rotating cast of bold-faced names and discussed worldly issues in between rounds of jokes and gossip—a “men’s club” atmosphere that irritated Melinda.“[It’s] not an overstatement. Going to Jeffrey’s was a respite from his marriage. It was a way of getting away from Melinda,” one of the people who was at several of the meetings said, adding that Epstein and Gates “were very close.”A representative for Bill told The Daily Beast: “Your characterization of his meetings with Epstein and others about philanthropy is inaccurate, including who participated. Similarly, any claim that Gates spoke of his marriage or Melinda in a disparaging manner is false.” A representative for Melinda did not respond to a request for comment for this report.As The Daily Beast exclusively reported, Melinda Gates was furious over Bill’s relationship with Epstein, and was put off by the creepy financier upon meeting him in September 2013, after the couple accepted an award at a New York City hotel. Melinda’s anger, people familiar with the matter said, eventually led to the demise of Bill and Epstein’s friendship.The Wall Street Journal recently reported Melinda Gates consulted divorce lawyers in October 2019, around the time it was publicly revealed that Bill met with Epstein—who had died by suicide in jail months earlier—multiple times in the past.Melinda Gates Warned Bill About Jeffrey EpsteinOn May 3, the high-powered couple announced they were ending their 27-year marriage in a statement that read, in part: “We no longer believe we can grow together as a couple in this next phase of our lives. We ask for space and privacy for our family as we begin to navigate this next life.” In her petition for divorce Melinda said her marriage is “irretrievably broken” and indicated the couple had settled on a plan to divide their vast assets outside the courtroom.Last week, the New York Post reported that Gates told his golfing buddies he was in a “loveless” marriage which “had been over for some time,” while People described Epstein as a “sore spot” in the couple’s relationship.But Epstein wasn’t the couple’s only point of contention. On Sunday, the New York Times reported that Gates allegedly made advances on women who worked at Microsoft and his foundation while he was married to Melinda. The Journal followed up with its own report, revealing that Gates resigned from Microsoft’s board in 2020 amid an internal investigation into an alleged sexual relationship with a company engineer, who came forward in late 2019. (“There was an affair almost 20 years ago which ended amicably,” a Gates spokeswoman told the Journal, adding that his departure from the board wasn’t related to the relationship.)People close to Bill Gates told The Daily Beast that the deterioration of their relationship could be seen in Bill and Melinda’s body language. The couple used to interact with “more laughter and ease,” said one friend of Bill, who added that eventually, “being around them was like arriving at a summit.”“It wasn’t like arriving at a dinner with a couple or something; it was more like two heads of state,” the friend added. “So that’s why Epstein could have been a factor [in their split], but was it the factor? That I fundamentally don’t believe.”The friend said the couple’s strictly regimented existence as billionaire philanthropists supplanted the more normal life and levity they enjoyed in younger years. “Bill is far less comfortable being out in the world,” the person said. “For Bill, it was just so rare he was allowed to do normal things, which I think he really craved.”To Bill, such “normal” things included meeting new people over dinner at Epstein’s home—a break from the tech mogul’s tightly choreographed schedule of events where he’d be seated at the head table with the most prominent guests.“Bill was embarrassed by the attention an entourage would have brought,” the person said. “His entourage was security, and he never looked comfortable with it. With Melinda, it was very imperious, ‘The Queen has arrived’ kind of thing.”Here’s What the Feds Found in Jeffrey Epstein’s Manhattan MansionGates may have visited Epstein, the person said, because Gates “enjoys talking and ideas and basically arguing with people, and he can be a really brutal person to argue with.”“He likes nothing better than to get together and debate or lecture people, or tell everyone what he’s doing with the polio vaccine. He has an ability, unlike any other person I’ve ever met, to lecture to a table of people without stopping for an hour.“Anyone that gave him a stage for a performance and said, ‘Bill, come talk to us about what you’re passionate about,’ that would be something he would enjoy.”Still, the person was surprised about the couple’s divorce announcement earlier this month: “I thought they would have made each other miserable for the rest of their lives.”Meanwhile, a former Gates Foundation employee told The Daily Beast that Gates wanted to get in the good graces of some of Epstein’s professional connections. “My understanding was he wasn’t hanging out with Epstein to get women,” the employee said.“Bill’s not amenable to anyone telling him what he should or shouldn’t do,” the person added. “If anyone were to say, ‘I don’t think you should hang out with [Epstein],’ it would have been Melinda.”The ex-employee said Bill and Melinda appeared to be distant and leading separate lives even more than a decade ago. “This has been going on a long time,” the source said, adding that Melinda was “bitter” and “wasn’t that into him.”“Their body language when they would be together, it was like a Melania and Donald thing: ‘Don’t hold my hand, get on the other side of the table,’” the person said, referring to reports of the former First Lady apparently yanking her hand from then-President Trump during public appearances over the years.Melinda Gates Called Divorce Lawyers in 2019 After Epstein Report: WSJAccording to the ex-employee, Melinda seemed to have a chip on her shoulder because “no one really did see her as an equal to Bill” and her work didn’t get as much media attention. “It really irritated her that people were more into Bill,” they said.Another former employee told The Daily Beast that Epstein was a topic of conversation among staff even in 2017—three years after the men’s friendship reportedly fizzled—because of concerns that Gates’ previous ties to Epstein could harm his reputation.“When you work at the foundation, your whole job in life is to protect and preserve and build up the reputation of Bill and Melinda Gates,” the person said. “I think that’s why it still came up.”Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet 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.

Maui kite foiler bitten by shark – Yahoo News

May 16—A 35-year-old man was bitten late this afternoon by a shark at Kanaha Beach Park on Maui, Maui County’s public information office reported in a news release.

The man fell off his kite foil about 400 yards offshore of the park, located in Kahului. The shark bit him as he was getting back on his board, officials said.

The man received 2-inch to 3-inch cuts to the back side of his upper leg, and managed to make it back to shore on his own.

He declined treatment.

The shark was estimated at 5 to 8 feet long.

Shark warning signs were posted, and officials will determine Sunday morning whether to reopen Kanaha Beach Park.

The park will remain closed until at least noon Sunday.

Dear Abby: Family member wants flow of unwanted junk to stop – Chattanooga Times Free Press

DEAR ABBY: Like many people in this country, my family has an aversion to throwing things out that might still be useful. Rather than load up the van and head to Goodwill, they give the stuff to me — partially used bottles of shampoo, a half-used pack of wipes, hair conditioner that smells too awful for them to use but they’re sure I’ll like, unwanted change purses and jewelry I would never wear, even puzzles with missing or dog-chewed pieces. They have also tried to offload old sewing machines, DVDs they won’t watch and craft supplies for projects I don’t enjoy.

Once, a sister tried to give me an old toaster oven filled with burnt breadcrumbs. (I have celiac disease.) Another time, Dad gave me a gift certificate for an oil change my mother won in a raffle after telling me he and another sister won’t go to that auto shop because they damaged my sister’s engine and did a lousy job working on my parents’ car!

It’s not like I’m so poor I can’t afford my own toaster oven or wipes, but if I turn down their unwanted items, as politely as I can, they become defensive with me. So I usually just say thanks and either toss the stuff in the trash or load it into my van and take it to Goodwill myself. But I’m tired of feeling like the family dump, and wish I could find a way to get it through their lovingly muddled heads that I’d rather not be “gifted” with their junk. Any thoughts? — THANKS BUT NO THANKS IN MISSISSIPPI

DEAR T.B.N.T.: The next time your parents and siblings call to tell you they’re coming over with more discards, tell them you know they mean well, but no. And keep repeating it until they finally get through their lovingly muddled heads that you mean it.

DEAR ABBY: I am writing because I’m in a tough situation and not sure what to do. I was recently told by a family member that my 24-year-old son is gay. He hasn’t given me any indication that he is.

My question for you is, should I confront him about it or wait until he tells me? I have come to terms with the possibility and will stand by him no matter what. I am also concerned that his father (we are divorced) will disown him if he finds out. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. — MOM IN OHIO

DEAR MOM: It would be interesting to know why this relative thinks your son is gay. Did your son tell the relative? I don’t think you should confront your son. In time his sexual orientation will become apparent whether he’s gay, straight, bi, asexual, etc. It should be his choice to reveal it — or not.

P.S. If he is gay, your ex-husband’s inability to accept his son, regardless of his sexual orientation, may be the reason he hasn’t spoken up.

Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Good advice for everyone — teens to seniors — is in “The Anger in All of Us and How to Deal With It.” To order, send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $8 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby, Anger Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling are included in the price.)

some text
Jeanne Phillips

22 people rescued after roller coaster in Arizona gets stuck – Yahoo News

The Daily Beast

Jeffrey Epstein Gave Bill Gates Advice on How to End ‘Toxic’ Marriage, Sources Say

Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast / Photo GettyBachelor sex-offender Jeffrey Epstein gave Bill Gates advice on ending his marriage with Melinda after the Microsoft co-founder complained about her during a series of meetings at the money manager’s mansion, according to two people familiar with the situation.Gates used the gatherings at Epstein’s $77 million New York townhouse as an escape from what he told Epstein was a “toxic” marriage, a topic both men found humorous, a person who attended the meetings told The Daily Beast.The billionaire met Epstein dozens of times starting in 2011 and continuing through to 2014 mostly at the financier’s Manhattan home—a substantially higher number than has been previously reported. Their conversations took place years before Bill and Melinda Gates announced this month that they were splitting up.Gates, in turn, encouraged Epstein to rehabilitate his image in the media following his 2008 guilty plea for soliciting a minor for prostitution, and discussed Epstein becoming involved with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.The people familiar with the matter said Gates found freedom in Epstein’s lair, where he met a rotating cast of bold-faced names and discussed worldly issues in between rounds of jokes and gossip—a “men’s club” atmosphere that irritated Melinda.“[It’s] not an overstatement. Going to Jeffrey’s was a respite from his marriage. It was a way of getting away from Melinda,” one of the people who was at several of the meetings said, adding that Epstein and Gates “were very close.”A representative for Bill told The Daily Beast: “Your characterization of his meetings with Epstein and others about philanthropy is inaccurate, including who participated. Similarly, any claim that Gates spoke of his marriage or Melinda in a disparaging manner is false.” A representative for Melinda did not respond to a request for comment for this report.As The Daily Beast exclusively reported, Melinda Gates was furious over Bill’s relationship with Epstein, and was put off by the creepy financier upon meeting him in September 2013, after the couple accepted an award at a New York City hotel. Melinda’s anger, people familiar with the matter said, eventually led to the demise of Bill and Epstein’s friendship.The Wall Street Journal recently reported Melinda Gates consulted divorce lawyers in October 2019, around the time it was publicly revealed that Bill met with Epstein—who had died by suicide in jail months earlier—multiple times in the past.Melinda Gates Warned Bill About Jeffrey EpsteinOn May 3, the high-powered couple announced they were ending their 27-year marriage in a statement that read, in part: “We no longer believe we can grow together as a couple in this next phase of our lives. We ask for space and privacy for our family as we begin to navigate this next life.” In her petition for divorce Melinda said her marriage is “irretrievably broken” and indicated the couple had settled on a plan to divide their vast assets outside the courtroom.Last week, the New York Post reported that Gates told his golfing buddies he was in a “loveless” marriage which “had been over for some time,” while People described Epstein as a “sore spot” in the couple’s relationship.But Epstein wasn’t the couple’s only point of contention. On Sunday, the New York Times reported that Gates allegedly made advances on women who worked at Microsoft and his foundation while he was married to Melinda. The Journal followed up with its own report, revealing that Gates resigned from Microsoft’s board in 2020 amid an internal investigation into an alleged sexual relationship with a company engineer, who came forward in late 2019. (“There was an affair almost 20 years ago which ended amicably,” a Gates spokeswoman told the Journal, adding that his departure from the board wasn’t related to the relationship.)People close to Bill Gates told The Daily Beast that the deterioration of their relationship could be seen in Bill and Melinda’s body language. The couple used to interact with “more laughter and ease,” said one friend of Bill, who added that eventually, “being around them was like arriving at a summit.”“It wasn’t like arriving at a dinner with a couple or something; it was more like two heads of state,” the friend added. “So that’s why Epstein could have been a factor [in their split], but was it the factor? That I fundamentally don’t believe.”The friend said the couple’s strictly regimented existence as billionaire philanthropists supplanted the more normal life and levity they enjoyed in younger years. “Bill is far less comfortable being out in the world,” the person said. “For Bill, it was just so rare he was allowed to do normal things, which I think he really craved.”To Bill, such “normal” things included meeting new people over dinner at Epstein’s home—a break from the tech mogul’s tightly choreographed schedule of events where he’d be seated at the head table with the most prominent guests.“Bill was embarrassed by the attention an entourage would have brought,” the person said. “His entourage was security, and he never looked comfortable with it. With Melinda, it was very imperious, ‘The Queen has arrived’ kind of thing.”Here’s What the Feds Found in Jeffrey Epstein’s Manhattan MansionGates may have visited Epstein, the person said, because Gates “enjoys talking and ideas and basically arguing with people, and he can be a really brutal person to argue with.”“He likes nothing better than to get together and debate or lecture people, or tell everyone what he’s doing with the polio vaccine. He has an ability, unlike any other person I’ve ever met, to lecture to a table of people without stopping for an hour.“Anyone that gave him a stage for a performance and said, ‘Bill, come talk to us about what you’re passionate about,’ that would be something he would enjoy.”Still, the person was surprised about the couple’s divorce announcement earlier this month: “I thought they would have made each other miserable for the rest of their lives.”Meanwhile, a former Gates Foundation employee told The Daily Beast that Gates wanted to get in the good graces of some of Epstein’s professional connections. “My understanding was he wasn’t hanging out with Epstein to get women,” the employee said.“Bill’s not amenable to anyone telling him what he should or shouldn’t do,” the person added. “If anyone were to say, ‘I don’t think you should hang out with [Epstein],’ it would have been Melinda.”The ex-employee said Bill and Melinda appeared to be distant and leading separate lives even more than a decade ago. “This has been going on a long time,” the source said, adding that Melinda was “bitter” and “wasn’t that into him.”“Their body language when they would be together, it was like a Melania and Donald thing: ‘Don’t hold my hand, get on the other side of the table,’” the person said, referring to reports of the former First Lady apparently yanking her hand from then-President Trump during public appearances over the years.Melinda Gates Called Divorce Lawyers in 2019 After Epstein Report: WSJAccording to the ex-employee, Melinda seemed to have a chip on her shoulder because “no one really did see her as an equal to Bill” and her work didn’t get as much media attention. “It really irritated her that people were more into Bill,” they said.Another former employee told The Daily Beast that Epstein was a topic of conversation among staff even in 2017—three years after the men’s friendship reportedly fizzled—because of concerns that Gates’ previous ties to Epstein could harm his reputation.“When you work at the foundation, your whole job in life is to protect and preserve and build up the reputation of Bill and Melinda Gates,” the person said. “I think that’s why it still came up.”Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet 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.

NYC Pride parade bans police; Gay officers ‘disheartened’ | News, Sports, Jobs – The Steubenville Herald-Star

FILE – In this Sunday, June 29, 2014 file photo, NYPD police officers march along Fifth Avenue during the gay pride parade in New York. Organizers of New York City’s Pride events said Saturday, May 15, 2021 they are banning police and other law enforcement from marching in their huge annual parade until at least 2025 and will also seek to keep on-duty officers a block away from the celebration of LGBTQ people and history. (AP Photo/Julia Weeks, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — Organizers of New York City’s Pride events said Saturday they are banning police and other law enforcement from marching in their huge annual parade until at least 2025 and will also seek to keep on-duty officers a block away from the celebration of LGBTQ people and history.

In their statement, NYC Pride urged members of law enforcement to “acknowledge their harm and to correct course moving forward.”

“The sense of safety that law enforcement is meant to provide can instead be threatening, and at times dangerous, to those in our community who are most often targeted with excessive force and/or without reason,” the group said.

It will also increase the event’s security budget to boost the presence of community-based security and first responders while reducing the police department’s presence.

Police will provide first response and security “only when absolutely necessary as mandated by city officials,” the group said, adding it hoped to keep police officers at least one city block away from event perimeter areas where possible.

Word of the ban came out Friday when the Gay Officers Action League said in a release it was disheartened by the decision.

The group called the ban an “abrupt about-face” and said the decision “to placate some of the activists in our community is shameful.”

The parade is scheduled for June after the coronavirus prevented many Pride events worldwide last year, including in New York which instead hosted virtual performances in front of masked participants and honored front-line workers in the pandemic crisis.

The disruptions frustrated activists who had hoped to collectively mark the 50th anniversary of the first Gay Pride parades and marches in Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco in 1970.

Those marches came a year after the 1969 uprising outside Manhattan’s Stonewall Inn, a gay bar, in response to a police raid. The uprising is largely credited with fueling the modern LGBTQ rights movement.

Pride season occurs this year amid activism inspired by the response to racial injustice and police brutality in the wake of George Floyd’s death last year at the hands of police in Minneapolis.

Pride NYC’s announcement Saturday follows a division among organizers in recent years in planning for celebrations of LGBTQ pride in New York City.

In 2019, there were two marches in Manhattan after some in the community concluded that the annual parade had become too commercialized. The Queer Liberation March aimed for a protest vibe, saying the main Pride march was too heavily policed by the same department that raided Stonewall a half century earlier.

The New York Police Department commissioner apologized for the raid during a briefing in 2019, calling it “wrong, plain and simple.”

Detective Sophia Mason, a spokesperson for the New York Police Department, said on Saturday the department’s “annual work to ensure a safe, enjoyable Pride season has been increasingly embraced by its participants.”

She added: “The idea of officers being excluded is disheartening and runs counter to our shared values of inclusion and tolerance. That said, we’ll still be there to ensure traffic safety and good order during this huge, complex event.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci to Emory University graduates: Embrace change and ‘expect the unexpected’ – CNBC

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading expert on infectious disease, told Emory University graduates to embrace the unexpected, during the Emory College of Arts and Sciences graduation ceremony Sunday.

Fauci reflected on his early career and his decision to study infectious diseases at the National Institutes of Health in 1968 “against the advice of many of my colleagues and mentors,” he said. At the time, public health scholars argued that “the war against infectious diseases had been won” with the creation of vaccines and antibiotics,” he said.

“I began to feel somewhat unsure and regretful to say the least of my career choice,” Fauci, White House chief medical advisor and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, said. “Was I actually entering a vanishing subspecialty?”

Of course, that was not the case.

In 1981, Fauci was reading the Centers for Disease Control’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report when he discovered “a handful of cases of an unusual pneumonia, among gay men living in Los Angeles.”

“I remember feeling, chills, literally, up and down my spine,” Fauci said. “We were dealing with a brand new deadly infectious disease. And so, I decided right there and then, to make an abrupt turn in my career and investigate the pathogenesis of this mysterious disease that was devastating the lives of young men.”

“The emergence of the AIDS pandemic, and my decision to embrace change, transformed my professional career, if not my entire life,” he said.

Fauci encouraged graduates to lean into change and seize new opportunities in their own professions and lives.

“Obviously not every opportunity or challenge that you will encounter is going to influence your career and your lives, or be as dramatic as a frightening infectious disease outbreak,” Fauci said. “However, please believe me: You will confront the same types of unpredictable events I’ve experienced, regardless of what directions you have careers or your lives.”

“And so, expect the unexpected. When you can, meet the challenge and seize the relevant opportunities as they arise.”

Fauci drew attention to the health disparities experienced by minority groups during the Covid pandemic, and urged graduates to commit to addressing them in their lives.

Fauci also told graduates to find their source of joy and happiness and “fully embrace it.”

In 2003, Fauci received an honorary degree from Emory. At the time, he spoke to students about the importance of being “perpetual students” who are never finished learning.

“The next lesson is that you must be prepared for virgin territory, the unexpected, and great changes, even in fields that may now seem very well established,” Fauci said in 2003.

Check out: Meet the middle-aged millennial: Homeowner, debt-burdened and turning 40

Passage: Remembering Norman Lloyd – Yahoo! Voices

The AV Club

Ryan Murphy’s Halston is a shapeless, surprisingly timid biodrama

Halston, the latest series to come from Ryan Murphy’s Netflix deal, is one nearly three decades in the making—the mega-producer has wanted to tell the story of the mononymous fashion designer since the start of his own expansive career. It’s not hard to see the appeal, or parallels: Like Murphy, Halston (born Roy Halston Frowick) grew up in Indiana, longing for the world beyond his rural setting. The Ultrasuede creator and the mastermind behind Glee and American Horror Story both exploded in popularity for their bold visions, and went on to dilute that cachet by indiscriminately lending their names to products and productions (with some notable exceptions). The cautionary tale woven into Halston, one that traces the threat of success to artistry, also underlines the connection, unwittingly or otherwise.

Two gay penguin couples are preparing for eggs at an aquarium this mating season – LGBTQ Nation

An aquarium this year will have not one, but two same-sex penguin couples on display for this year’s mating season.

The all-female mates have been preparing their nests, collecting pebbles, and waiting in anticipation for this time of year. They may potentially adopt unwanted eggs from other penguins also mating this season.

Related: Troublemaking pair of gay penguins won’t stop stealing eggs. This time they took the whole nest.

The Sea Life London Aquarium will be the home of the lesbian power couples Marmalade and Chickpea, and Marama and Rocky. “As well as our male-female penguin couples, this breeding season we also have two female same-sex couples who are also going through their nesting rituals,” aquarium manager Catherine Pritchard announced.

Marmalade and Chickpea are newly together, but Marama and Rocky have already raised an egg they adopted together in 2019.

Visitors can see them as early as tomorrow, and they might catch them in the midst of their mating rituals.

All of the aquarium’s penguins are Gentoo penguins, natively common to areas just outside of Antarctica, such as the British sub-Antarctic territory Falkland Islands. They are considered the fastest swimmers among penguin species and inspired the software code distribution known as Gentoo Linux.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) recognizes them as a near-threatened species, according to National Geographic. Experts at Sea Life are hoping to have the most “successful” mating season possible, so they may more than welcome an adoption by their lesbian couples.

Gentoo penguin parents “often form long-lasting bonds” and “are highly nurturing.” Pairs can incubate eggs for a period of approximately 35 days, and once hatched, the babies are nurtured for another period of more than a month, with each parent taking turns at every responsibility.

“Gentoo penguins are the ultimate romantics, and their dating techniques are truly unique – so much so that as humans, we could certainly learn a thing or two from their passion and commitment to finding a mate,” Pritchard said according to the BBC.

Same-sex penguin couples are common in nature, and many serve as superstars at different zoos and aquariums around the world. Inca and Rayas, another pair of Gentoo penguin parents, are currently living in Madrid’s Faunia Park Zoo.

There’s also Thelma and Louise, two lesbian penguins raising a chick together in a New Zealand zoo. They’re entering a decade together and have mystified zookeepers who don’t know how they fertilized their last egg.

The London Zoo has started to let their gay penguins celebrate Pride, and the Heythrop Zoo in Oxfordshire helped throw a lavish English countryside wedding for their same-sex penguin couple, Ferrari and Pringle, last year.

There’s also Sphen and Magic, the two male penguins in Australia that successfully hatched an egg over two years ago and raised the chick, Lara, into adulthood. Last fall, they were preparing to become prospective grandparents.

Elsewhere in Europe, there’s a pair of troublemaking gay penguins who are notorious for constantly stealing eggs from other penguin couples. The Dutch duo stole an egg in 2019 that didn’t hatch, and unfortunately in 2020 they decided to eggsnatch from a lesbian couple, whose eggs were left unfertile.

For contrast, Eduardo and Rio, the surrogate penguin dads at the San Francisco zoo, earned “best penguin dad” honors.

Even gay couples who aren’t yet able to raise children have enjoyed their life together. A same-sex penguin duo in Munich adopted a little rock as their companion when they didn’t have an egg to take care of.

While other zoos are homes to a few gay penguin couples, one in Ireland has become home to four, more than the straight couples they shelter.

BYU professor under fire for labeling gay student an anti-Christ – Queerty

via Shutterstock

A celebrated teacher at Brigham Young University has landed himself in hot water after referring to a gay student by a Mormon term associated with the anti-Christ.

The Salt Lake City Tribune reports Professor Hank Smith made the comment on Twitter last month. Smith serves as an assistant teaching professor in the religion department at BYU. Smith had gone on a Twitter tirade about former parishioners ex-communicated by the Church of Latter-Day Saints, following the ouster of sex therapist Natasha Helfer. The church banned Helfer over her sex-affirming teachings, including that masturbation and same-sex relationships are healthy.

In now-deleted tweets, Smith defended the church’s casting out of Helfer, labeling her defenders non-believers. Then a gay student and practicing Mormon, Calvin Burke, offered an apology for Smith’s remarks. Burke had also attended Smith’s classes.

“On behalf of Mormonism, I apologize for Hank Smith,” Burke wrote.

Smith replied, labeling Burke a “Korihor.” For those unfamiliar with the term, Korihor is a character in the Book of Mormon who denies the existence of Christ. The book also labels him a false prophet and anti-Christ. God punishes him by making him mute, and a crowd tramples him to death.

Smith’s remarks invited wide backlash, which prompted him to delete the tweets and issue an apology. “I do need to apologize for calling Cal what I did,” he wrote. “I deleted the reply. That was unjustified and unfair. My emotions got the better of me. I am very sorry.”

Worse, Burke has begun receiving death threats over the exchange. Korihor is also a term used by the alt-right DezNat movement, a group of fundamentalist Mormons that oppose rights for women and frequently target the LGBTQ community for harassment. Members of the group began targeting Burke after Smith’s use of the term. Burke has since made his Twitter account private and declined to comment to reporters.

Related: LGBTQ students turn Mormon university’s huge, mountainside logo rainbow

Brigham Young University remains mum on if Smith’s conduct could result in disciplinary action. Carri Jenkins, a spokesperson for the school, told reporters BYU has “processes in place to address personnel matters. These are handled on a confidential basis.” She also added she “wouldn’t be able to comment on an individual situation.”

According to The Salt Lake City Tribune, no professor has ever faced disciplinary action for harassment of a queer student. On the other hand, the school has a long history of punishing or terminating faculty that defend LGBTQ students.

FORECAST: Sunday Morning – Yahoo News

The Week

China criticizes U.S. for preventing U.N. Security Council statement calling for Israel-Hamas cease-fire

Tensions between the United States and China seem to loom over everything. During Sunday’s United Nations Security Council meeting on the escalating Israel-Hamas conflict, China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi accused the U.S. of preventing the council from issuing a unified statement on the situation. China going in hard against US in today’s Israel-Palestine violence debate at UN Security Council So far, after 2 hours of briefing and speeches it’s US vs everyone else, on whether UN shd call for immediate deescalation https://t.co/o1B405tiBo — Ryan Heath (@PoliticoRyan) May 16, 2021 While China’s criticism was the most direct, other nations on the council, including Ireland, Norway, and Mexico reportedly made it clear that crafting a statement calling for an immediate cease-fire is an urgent matter. And Ben Rhodes, who worked as the deputy national security adviser for strategic communications and speechwriting in the Obama administration, tweeted that it “feels increasingly untenable for the U.S. to see this loss of civilian life in Gaza — including so many children — and not publicly call for a cease-fire.” At the moment, the U.S. appears to be sticking to the status quo, however. In her remarks during the council meeting, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Linda Thomas-Greenfield said Washington is working to end the conflict and will support a cease-fire, but suggested the parties involved in the fighting will have to take the initiative. More stories from theweek.com7 scathingly funny cartoons about Liz Cheney’s ousterVaccinating the worldNetanyahu fiercely defends Israeli air strikes following 42 more civilian deaths in Gaza

Alireza Fazeli Monfared wanted to live as a free gay man in the West. His family in Iran beheaded him days before his dream came true, say activists. – Report Door

  • Alireza Fazeli Monfared, a 20-year-old gay Iranian man, was killed in an alleged “honor killing.”

  • He was days away from fleeing Iran because of homophobic persecution, according to voice notes obtained by Insider.

  • “The International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia, and Biphobia is coming up on Monday. On that day, we should speak out about this,’ an activist said.

  • Visit Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Alireza Fazeli Monfared, a 20-year old Iranian man, was beheaded in an “honor killing” by family members after they learned that he was gay, according to an Iranian human rights group.

Monfared was murdered on May 4 – just a few days after his half-brother learned about his sexuality, the Iranian LGBTQ network 6Rang told Insider after conversations with Monfared’s mother and close friend.

He was seeking a permanent exemption from Iran’s compulsory military service so that he could claim asylum elsewhere, Monfared said in several audio messages.

But five days before he was due to leave Iran, his half-brother discovered paperwork for his military exemption detailing his sexuality. This was the trigger for his relatives to take him to a remote village and cut his life short in the most brutal way, 6Rang’s executive director Shadi Amin said.

The 20-year-old’s murder has sparked a global outcry, including social media posts by the likes of Demi Lovato. But Iranian human rights activists have said that it is emblematic of the daily persecution gay people in Iran face.

Okan Sengun, executive director and co-founder of the LGBT Asylum Project, said: “The International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia, and Biphobia’ is coming up on Monday (May 17). On that day, we should speak out about this. Make sure that these laws change. That’s key.”

Read more: How to support nonbinary and trans colleagues at work, and the email template to use if you accidentally misgender them

‘I have been threatened by my father’s side of the family’

Alireza Fazeli Monfared

Monfared was a 20-year-old Arab-Iranian from Ahvaz, the capital of Iran’s Khuzestan province.

He was his mother’s only child but had half-siblings from his father’s previous marriage.

His family was wealthy, and his Instagram page shows a love of designer fashion.

He also enjoyed experimenting with makeup but felt unable to do so in public. “Pressure means not being able to behave however you want in society,” he said in a voice recording sent to a friend and forwarded to Insider. “For example, I would like to walk around with a bit of make-up, but you know how Ahvaz is.”

His family was unhappy with the way he presented himself, the executive director of 6Rang said. “The clothes he chose, using makeup, none of that is usual in Iran for a young man,” Amin said.

The family’s disapproval led to violent threats from relatives. “I have been threatened by my father’s side of the family – murder and such,” he said in another voice recording. “My father sided with them.”

Monfared dreamt of fleeing Iran and starting a new life in Europe. “I’m wondering whether I should go to Sweden or Noway,” he explained in one of the audio messages.

He planned to escape to Turkey mid-May and then, once there, to apply for asylum elsewhere, Amin said. “He was not ready to continue this conflict with his family,” she added.

But to leave Iran, the young man first had to receive his military exemption.

Homosexuality is considered a psychological disease in Iran

While being gay is forbidden in Iran and punishable by death, the law allows gay men to forgo military service.

“Those who have special conditions can get an exemption; if they have a particular illness, or a missing limb, or other physical issues,” Jasmin Ramsey, communications director for the Center for Human Rights in Iran, told Insider.

“Homosexuality is also considered a psychological disease in Iran and the military’s military board can exempt a gay man from service if they are deemed homosexual after an examination,” she added.

Monfared’s exemption was close to being approved and he was planning to flee imminently, Amin said. But when documentation for his exemption arrived, it was not Monfared who first opened the letter.

A relative opened his mail and read information confirming Monfared’s sexuality, Amin continued. “I think their hate of homosexuality was so huge that they decided to kill him,” she added.

On May 4, Monfared made the final preparations for his departure. He went to a local store to try and sell his cellphone, according to Amin.

Three male relatives – a half-brother and two cousins – were waiting for him in a car outside the store. They told Monfared that his father needed to speak to him urgently and that they would drive him home.

The relatives then drove the 20-year-old to a rural village, Amin said. It was there that they allegedly murdered him with a knife.

Monfared’s mother was then called by a relative and told to visit a location in the rural village. A day later, she found her son’s beheaded body.

His distraught mother was later hospitalized for shock. According to several sources, no arrests have been made yet.

Insider requested confirmation from the Iranian Embassy in London but a response was not immediately provided.

‘He was so full of life’

The news of Monfared’s tragic death has sparked an international outcry.

Celebrities, including actress and singer Demi Lovato, have shared posts commemorating the young man on social media.

Masih Alinejad, a prominent Iranian activist, living in exile in New York, uses her platform of five million Instagram followers to raise awareness about the killing.

The story is harrowing for her, she said, because Monfared was a fan and followed her on Instagram. “I went to look at his page and I found that he was so full of life,” she told Insider. “Immediately, I posted about his death on my social media and it went viral. I wish he had received this sort of attention while he was alive.”

In response to her post, members of the LGBTQ communities living in Iran sent her clips – secretly filmed – chronicling the difficulties of living in a country opposed to their existence. Iranians who send videos to Alinejad face up to 10 years in prison, the head of Tehran’s Revolutionary Court warned in July 2019.

The activist hopes that the videos inform people of queer people’s lives in Iran, where punishments for being gay range from 100 lashes of the whip to execution.

Ramsey, the communications director for the Center for Human Rights in Iran, said homophobia is widespread in Iran.

“LGBTQ people must conceal their sexual identity if they want to avoid being discriminated against, mentally or physically harmed, or prosecuted. At the same time, they have no means of redress for rights violations and abuses because revealing their identity could get them prosecuted,” she said.

In the days following the murder, Okan Sengun of the LGBT Asylum Project said he received many emails from gay Iranians who are heartbroken by Monfared’s death.”They’re all saying a similar thing,” Sengun told Insider. “‘I don’t want to be the next Alireza.’”

Read the original article on Insider

Suns Vs Spurs: NBA Basketball Betting Odds & Trends | 5/16/2021 – TheLines.com


Suns Vs Spurs: NBA Basketball Betting Odds & Trends | 5/16/2021


















The San Antonio Spurs (33-38) are 8.5-point underdogs as they attempt to break a three-game losing streak when they host the Phoenix Suns (50-21) on Sunday, May 16, 2021 at AT&T Center. The contest airs at 2:00 PM ET on BSSW. The matchup has an over/under of 226.

The betting insights in this article reflect odds data from DraftKings Sportsbook as of May 16, 2021, 6:40 AM ET. See table below for current betting odds.

Suns vs Spurs Betting Odds

Suns vs Spurs Props

Looking to bet on props for this game? Use our prop search tool to find the best odds across legal sportsbooks in the US.

Injury Report as of May 16

Suns:
Deandre Ayton: Out (Knee),
Abdel Nader: Out (Knee),
Cameron Johnson: Out (Wrist)

Spurs:
Rudy Gay: Out (Heel),
Derrick White: Out For Season (Ankle),
Trey Lyles: Out (Ankle),
Luka Samanic: Out (Hand),
Dejounte Murray: Out (Back),
DeMar DeRozan: Out (Rest),
Jakob Poeltl: Out (Rest)

Suns and Spurs Records ATS

  • Phoenix has a 42-28-1 record ATS this year.
  • When favored by at least 8.5 points, the Suns are 9-8 against the spread this season.
  • 41 of 71 Phoenix games this season (57.7%) resulted in a total greater than the contest’s over/under.
  • San Antonio has a 38-32-1 record ATS this season.
  • 49.3% of San Antonio’s 71 games this season have stayed under the over/under.

Click here to get the best DraftKings Sportsbook deposit bonus!

Head to Head

Devin Booker scored a team-high 27 points to help lead the Suns over Gorgui Dieng (18 points) and the Spurs 140-103 in their most recent matchup on May 15, 2021. The Suns were favored by 10.5 points in the game and covered the spread in the win. The teams scored 243 total points to cover the 226-point over/under.

Date Favorite Home Team Spread Total Favorite Moneyline Underdog Moneyline Game Type Result
5/15/2021 Suns Spurs -10.5 226 -601 437 Regular Season 140-103 PHO*
4/17/2021 Suns Suns -12 223.5 -770 527 Regular Season 111-85 SA*
  • 5/15/2021 DNP – Suns: Deandre Ayton;
    Spurs: DeMar DeRozan, Dejounte Murray, Derrick White
  • 4/17/2021 DNP –
    Spurs: DeMar DeRozan
  • Scoring Trends

    • Phoenix’s games this year have resulted in a higher total score than Sunday’s matchup over/under (226 points) in 35 out of 71 opportunities (49.3% of matchups).
    • In 49.3% of San Antonio’s games this season (35 of 71), the total points scored was more than Sunday’s 226-point over/under.
    • The Suns have seen a 224.5 average over/under in their games this season, 1.5 points fewer than the over/under in this contest.
    • Spurs’ games have an over/under of 223.6 points this season, 2.4 points fewer than the total points bet for this matchup.
    • The average implied total for the Suns this season is 114.2 points, 2.8 fewer points than their implied total of 117 points in Sunday’s game.
    • So far this season, Phoenix has outscored its implied point total for this matchup (117) 33 times.
    • The average implied point total on the season for the Spurs (114.5) is 5.5 more points than the team’s implied total in this matchup (109).
    • San Antonio has totaled more than 109 points in 42 games on the season.
    • The Suns are at the sixth spot in the NBA’s scoring charts (115.2 PPG), while the Spurs allow the 18th-fewest points per game (112.7) in the league.
    • The Suns have totaled a total of 417 more points than their opponents this year (an average of 5.9 per game), while the Spurs have been out-scored by opponents on average this year (by 123 total points, 1.8 per game).

    Suns Leaders

    • The Suns scoring leader is Booker, who contributes 25.6 points per game.
    • Booker’s points prop total for the game is set at 33.5, 7.9 points greater than his season average of 25.6.
    • Chris Paul leads Phoenix with 8.9 assists a game and Deandre Ayton paces the squad with 10.5 rebounds per matchup.
    • Ayton’s rebounding prop total for the game is posted at 11.5 rebounds, 1.0 rebound greater than his season average of 10.5.
    • Jae Crowder is the top three-point shooter for the Suns, knocking down 2.5 per game.
    • Crowder’s three pointers made prop over/under for the game is set at 6.5, 4.0 shots higher than his season average of 2.5.
    • Phoenix’s steals leader is Paul, who averages 1.4 per game. Ayton leads the team averaging 1.2 blocks a contest.
    • Ayton’s blocks prop total for the contest is set at 1.5, 0.3 blocks higher than his season average of 1.2.

    Spurs Leaders

    • DeMar DeRozan takes the top spot on the Spurs scoring and assist lists, tallying 21.6 points and 7.0 assists per game.
    • DeRozan’s points prop over/under for the contest is set at 24.5, 2.9 points greater than his season average of 21.6.
    • Jakob Poeltl collects all of the boards and is the San Antonio leader in rebounds, pulling down 7.9 per game.
    • Poeltl’s PRA prop over/under for the game is set at 17.5, 0.8 less than his season average of 18.3.
    • Patty Mills is tops from three-point range for the Spurs, knocking down 2.4 threes per game.
    • Mills’ three pointers made prop over/under for the game is set at 1.5, 0.9 shots less than his season average of 2.4.
    • San Antonio’s Dejounte Murray has the top spot on the team’s steals leaderboard with 1.5 per game and Poeltl is first in blocks with 1.8 per game.
    • Poeltl’s blocks prop over/under for the contest is set at 1.5, 0.3 blocks lower than his season average of 1.8.

    Predictions

    Click here for today’s NBA betting picks from our team of experts.

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    Staff Avatar

    Alireza Fazeli Monfared wanted to live as a free gay man in the West. His family in Iran beheaded him days before his dream came true, say activists. – Yahoo News

    Alireza Fazeli Monfared
    • Alireza Fazeli Monfared, a 20-year-old gay Iranian man, was killed in an alleged “honor killing.”

    • He was days away from fleeing Iran because of homophobic persecution, according to voice notes obtained by Insider.

    • “The International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia, and Biphobia is coming up on Monday. On that day, we should speak out about this,’ an activist said.

    • Visit Insider’s homepage for more stories.

    Alireza Fazeli Monfared, a 20-year old Iranian man, was beheaded in an “honor killing” by family members after they learned that he was gay, according to an Iranian human rights group.

    Monfared was murdered on May 4 – just a few days after his half-brother learned about his sexuality, the Iranian LGBTQ network 6Rang told Insider after conversations with Monfared’s mother and close friend.

    He was seeking a permanent exemption from Iran’s compulsory military service so that he could claim asylum elsewhere, Monfared said in several audio messages.

    Related: 

    But five days before he was due to leave Iran, his half-brother discovered paperwork for his military exemption detailing his sexuality. This was the trigger for his relatives to take him to a remote village and cut his life short in the most brutal way, 6Rang’s executive director Shadi Amin said.

    The 20-year-old’s murder has sparked a global outcry, including social media posts by the likes of Demi Lovato. But Iranian human rights activists have said that it is emblematic of the daily persecution gay people in Iran face.

    Okan Sengun, executive director and co-founder of the LGBT Asylum Project, said: “The International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia, and Biphobia’ is coming up on Monday (May 17). On that day, we should speak out about this. Make sure that these laws change. That’s key.”

    Read more: How to support nonbinary and trans colleagues at work, and the email template to use if you accidentally misgender them

    ‘I have been threatened by my father’s side of the family’

    Alireza Fazeli Monfared

    Monfared was a 20-year-old Arab-Iranian from Ahvaz, the capital of Iran’s Khuzestan province. 

    He was his mother’s only child but had half-siblings from his father’s previous marriage.

    His family was wealthy, and his Instagram page shows a love of designer fashion.

    He also enjoyed experimenting with makeup but felt unable to do so in public. “Pressure means not being able to behave however you want in society,” he said in a voice recording sent to a friend and forwarded to Insider. “For example, I would like to walk around with a bit of make-up, but you know how Ahvaz is.”

    His family was unhappy with the way he presented himself, the executive director of 6Rang said. “The clothes he chose, using makeup, none of that is usual in Iran for a young man,” Amin said. 

    The family’s disapproval led to violent threats from relatives. “I have been threatened by my father’s side of the family – murder and such,” he said in another voice recording. “My father sided with them.”

    Monfared dreamt of fleeing Iran and starting a new life in Europe. “I’m wondering whether I should go to Sweden or Noway,” he explained in one of the audio messages.

    He planned to escape to Turkey mid-May and then, once there, to apply for asylum elsewhere, Amin said. “He was not ready to continue this conflict with his family,” she added.

    But to leave Iran, the young man first had to receive his military exemption. 

    Homosexuality is considered a psychological disease in Iran

    While being gay is forbidden in Iran and punishable by death, the law allows gay men to forgo military service.

    “Those who have special conditions can get an exemption; if they have a particular illness, or a missing limb, or other physical issues,” Jasmin Ramsey, communications director for the Center for Human Rights in Iran, told Insider.

    “Homosexuality is also considered a psychological disease in Iran and the military’s military board can exempt a gay man from service if they are deemed homosexual after an examination,” she added.

    Monfared’s exemption was close to being approved and he was planning to flee imminently, Amin said. But when documentation for his exemption arrived, it was not Monfared who first opened the letter.

    A relative opened his mail and read information confirming Monfared’s sexuality, Amin continued. “I think their hate of homosexuality was so huge that they decided to kill him,” she added.

    On May 4, Monfared made the final preparations for his departure. He went to a local store to try and sell his cellphone, according to Amin.

    Three male relatives – a half-brother and two cousins – were waiting for him in a car outside the store. They told Monfared that his father needed to speak to him urgently and that they would drive him home.

    The relatives then drove the 20-year-old to a rural village, Amin said. It was there that they allegedly murdered him with a knife.

    Monfared’s mother was then called by a relative and told to visit a location in the rural village. A day later, she found her son’s beheaded body.

    His distraught mother was later hospitalized for shock. According to several sources, no arrests have been made yet.

    Insider requested confirmation from the Iranian Embassy in London but a response was not immediately provided.

    ‘He was so full of life’

    The news of Monfared’s tragic death has sparked an international outcry.

    Celebrities, including actress and singer Demi Lovato, have shared posts commemorating the young man on social media.

    Masih Alinejad, a prominent Iranian activist, living in exile in New York, uses her platform of five million Instagram followers to raise awareness about the killing.

    The story is harrowing for her, she said, because Monfared was a fan and followed her on Instagram. “I went to look at his page and I found that he was so full of life,” she told Insider. “Immediately, I posted about his death on my social media and it went viral. I wish he had received this sort of attention while he was alive.”

    In response to her post, members of the LGBTQ communities living in Iran sent her clips – secretly filmed – chronicling the difficulties of living in a country opposed to their existence. Iranians who send videos to Alinejad face up to 10 years in prison, the head of Tehran’s Revolutionary Court warned in July 2019.

    The activist hopes that the videos inform people of queer people’s lives in Iran, where punishments for being gay range from 100 lashes of the whip to execution. 

    Ramsey, the communications director for the Center for Human Rights in Iran, said homophobia is widespread in Iran.

    “LGBTQ people must conceal their sexual identity if they want to avoid being discriminated against, mentally or physically harmed, or prosecuted. At the same time, they have no means of redress for rights violations and abuses because revealing their identity could get them prosecuted,” she said.

    In the days following the murder, Okan Sengun of the LGBT Asylum Project said he received many emails from gay Iranians who are heartbroken by Monfared’s death.”They’re all saying a similar thing,” Sengun told Insider. “‘I don’t want to be the next Alireza.'” 

    Read the original article on Insider

    Letters: COVID-19 showed us why everyone needs easy access to health care – San Francisco Chronicle

    As California “roars back” from the pandemic, budget leaders must prioritize public health by eliminating the needless exclusion of income-eligible immigrants from Medi-Cal. The governor and legislature can make a down payment toward the health of all Californians by ensuring that immigrants, who have been disproportionately impacted by the pandemic, have access to health care.

    Everyone living in California, regardless of immigration status, will benefit for years to come if we invest in strengthening our health care system.

    The pandemic forced public health officials to consider how equity affects our collective well-being. We witnessed this when leaders protected older adults from COVID-19 by prioritizing them for vaccines. Our state can build on the success of its COVID-19 response and make all low-income Californians eligible for Medi-Cal.

    One year later, it is not too late for Gov. Newsom to return to his promise of Medi-Cal for all adults 65 and over. But with a seismic surplus of $75 billion, coverage for seniors is low-hanging fruit. The governor must act with courage and guarantee health care for all. If we’ve learned anything after this year, it’s that no one in our communities is healthy until we all are healthy.

    Benyamin Chao, Los Angeles

    Ghost gun crackdown

    Megan Cassidy’s article on the proposed “ghost gun” ban in San Francisco is demonstrative of a spike in senseless, preventable violence in our communities.

    If I were so inclined, at this very moment, I could purchase an 80% complete firearm with a slide parts kit. I could purchase using Bitcoin or another type of cryptocurrency. Expected shipping: 3-4 business days. When I get my package, all I need is two hours, a drill and sandpaper. I now have a fully operational handgun, barren of any serial number.

    I know these things because my little brother, at 18 years old, was shot and killed one summer night with a ghost gun. For too many of us, gun violence is a face remembered, a bittersweet reminiscence and the pang of realizing there will be no more future memories.

    I want to live in a country where firearms are not the leading cause of death for children and teens. I want to live where nascent hopes, dreams and aspirations are not cut off by the pull of a trigger.

    That envisioned future necessitates closing the ghost gun loophole. It needs to start now.

    Sabrina Mangseth, Carlsbad

    (San Diego County)

    An education case study

    As some school districts have reopened and others have not, we have what economists delight in: a natural experiment. I invite The Chronicle’s editorial board to pick a similar district to SFUSD that reopened last September (perhaps San Antonio, for its similar size); then pick a measure of choice (graduation rate, dropout rate, standardized test score, etc.).

    If over the next couple of years we see a statistically significant decline of SFUSD versus the opened school district, I will be forced to agree with their May 13 editorial that my work and that of colleagues was “inadequate.”

    If the evidence shows otherwise, I invite The Chronicle to apologize to all the teachers busting their butts to provide support in this crisis.

    M. Wolf, San Francisco

    Better late than never

    It was so nice to read that Tom Ammiano finally received his letter for running track after six decades of delay, after being denied it in 1959 because he was gay.

    I worked with Tom one summer as a teacher and got to know him over the years when he was a supervisor. He was an upstanding individual who cared for and stood up for the little person his whole career. I’m so glad his letter and sweater made his day.

    Thank you, Tom, for all the years of service you have given to us.

    Laura Hurley, San Francisco

    Real water wasters

    California household users are being urged to conserve water. How about asking frackers to cut back, too?

    The amount of water they use to get a bit of gas is unconscionable. We need the water more than the gas.

    California is again in drought. Let’s ask big industrial water users to cut back to help the whole state.

    Connie Suzuki, Daly City

    UK to host its first global LGBT+ conference with newly-appointed ‘special envoy’ on LGBT+ rights – Yahoo Eurosport UK

    Prime minister Boris Johnson has appointed a new “special envoy” on LGBT+ rights who will chair the UK’s first global LGBT+ conference in 2022.

    Lord Herbert of South Downs, the Conservative MP for Arundel and South Downs from 2005 to 2019, has been named to “lead efforts to champion LGBT equality at home and abroad”, the government announced on Sunday (16 May).

    Herbert was the first out gay man to be elected for the party and has previously served as chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on LGBT+ rights.

    “As special envoy, Lord Herbert will bring together the government’s domestic work and supercharge our global leadership on LGBT+ rights,” a press release said, “focusing on progressing legislative reform, tackling violence and discrimination, and ensuring equal access to public services for LGBT+ people.”

    Herbert will work closely with Liz Truss, minister for women and equalities, in the run up to the conference. The event has been named “Safe To Be Me”, and will focus on tackling LGBT+ inequality around the world.

    The UK had previously resisted calls to appoint a special LGBT+ envoy, a role which has existed in the US and Canada for years.

    The change of heart comes as the Tory government is accused of alienating the LGBT+ community by abandoning reforms to the Gender Recognition Act and continually stalling a long-promised conversion therapy ban.

    Truss in particular has provoked deep concern for her “disturbing” attacks on trans people and for her failure to promote or even consider LGBT+ rights abroad when securing trade deals.

    The mounting issues led to the sensational resignation of several LGBT+ advisers, who spoke of a “hostile environment for LGBT+ people among this administration”.

    Announcing the latest plans, Boris Johnson claimed: “I have always been immensely proud to live in a country that is one of the most progressive and liberal when it comes to LGBT+ equality. The freedom to love who you want is a key British value and a vital component of any democracy.

    “The pandemic has however exacerbated the existing inequality LGBT+ people experience globally, with violence and discrimination a daily reality for some. The UK government, with our international partners, believes this is the time to take collective, global action.”

    Herbert’s role as special envoy is intended to leverage the UK’s global influence in promoting LGBT+ rights abroad, as Truss has failed to do.

    “With our immense soft power, and as a global force for good, the UK has an important role to play in leading international efforts to tackle the violence and discrimination against LGBT+ people which should have no place in the modern world,” Herbert said.

    “I am committed to the cause of promoting LGBT+ rights worldwide and I look forward to continuing that in my role as the prime minister’s special envoy and as the chair of the global LGBT+ conference.

    “At a time when COVID has pulled many of us apart, the conference offers a real chance to bring people together and drive change for good.”

    His good intentions were somewhat undermined by recent comments from another new government appointee, the head of the Equalities and Human Rights Commission, who said on Saturday that it was “entirely reasonable” to challenge the gender identity of trans women.

    Her commission has controversially supported the appeal of Maya Forstater, a woman who tried and failed to convince an employment tribunal that her refusal to accept that trans women are women should be a protected “philosophical belief”.