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Asian gay men encouraged to participate in a major sexual health survey – OUTinPerth

ACON, NSW’s leading HIV organisation, is calling on Asian gay men and men who have sex with men in NSW to participate in vital research into their sexual health and wellbeing.

The Gay Asian Men’s Survey 2021 (GAMS) aims to collect responses from gay, bisexual and queer men (cis and trans) with an Asian background, on a range of issues including HIV and sexual health, sexual practices, relationships and other behaviours. Data collected from the survey will inform programs that improve the health and wellbeing of Asian men in LGBTQ communities.

ACON CEO Nicolas Parkhill said the landmark survey provides important insights on key sexual health issues affecting the Asian gay male community.

“As we observe declines in rates of HIV transmission and other improvements in sexual health generally across men in our communities, these are unfortunately not being reflected as well amongst overseas-born gay men, particularly from Asian backgrounds,” Parkhill said.

“We know that from NSW Health HIV data over the past few years that men in our communities with an Asian background continue to face barriers to appropriate HIV prevention messaging, treatment and care.

“Previous experiences of criminalisation, fear of disclosure, visa precariousness, Medicare ineligibility, experiences of racism and isolation, and of course language barriers, all impact on someone’s ability to negotiate safe sex and access testing and treatment options.”

With a strong focus on culture, race and migration, this year’s GAMS aims to gather information from men with an Asian background on HIV and sexual health, as well as their behaviours on HIV and STI testing, and HIV treatment.

“The data collected from this survey will help us and our community research partners in identifying key priorities, and in the development of community-led and community-focused HIV responses,” Parkhill added.

“Over the years, ACON has been able to engage with and develop close relationships with Asian men in our communities through our HIV prevention and testing campaigns and services that deliver culturally appropriate messages, while our peer education programs continue to see very high engagement.

“But we know that more needs to be done to enhance our understanding, so we urge Asian men to participate in this survey; it will allow us to continue tailoring and delivering effective and culturally appropriate HIV and sexual health resources and programs.”

GAMS is for men (cis and trans) aged 18 years or above, who have had sex with other men in the past five years, are currently living in NSW, and self-identify as having an Asian background.

The survey will be conducted online and is available in four languages including English, Chinese (simplified), Chinese (traditional) and Thai. Complete the survey for a chance to win one of ten $100 Visa gift cards.

GAMS 2021 is funded by the Blood-Borne Viruses & STI Research, Intervention and Strategic Evaluation Program (BRISE), and supported by the Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Gay Men’s Action Group, which consists of ACON, UNSW Sydney’s Centre for Social Research in Health, Metro Sydney-based Local Health Districts, and the Multicultural HIV and Hepatitis Service.

To access GAMS 2021, go to www.gayams.org.au.

Source: Media Release


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NYC Pride bans police from events through 2025, LGBT officers slam the move – WSLS 10

NEW YORK CITY – Groups representing LGBTQIA+ members of law enforcement will be banned from participating in NYC Pride events, including the annual march held each June, organizers announced Saturday, according to a report by NBC New York.

Heritage of Pride, which organizes the annual march and events, announced the immediate suspension of law-enforcement affiliated groups from participating in NYC Pride events through at least 2025. Organizers say that decision will be reviewed by leadership to determine the policy’s future.

The decision to bar such groups from participation comes as Heritage of Pride makes efforts to greatly reduce the overall number of police and participating law enforcement from its events — that includes the use of the NYPD that has previously partnered with the organization to provide security.

Instead, the NYPD will “provide first response and security only when absolutely necessary as mandated by city officials” and officers will be kept one block away from the march and other events whenever possible, organizers said. The group plans to fund the use of private security for emergency response and volunteers trained in de-escalation.

“NYC Pride seeks to create safer spaces for the LGBTQIA+ and BIPOC communities at a time when violence against marginalized groups, specifically BIPOC and trans communities, has continued to escalate,” the statement from Heritage of Pride said Saturday. “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 Gay Officers Action League was the first to react to the decision by Heritage of Pride, reacting late Friday before the official announcement came out. GOAL, which represents LGBTQ officers and members of the NYPD, called the decision 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,” said GOAL President Brian Downey.

The NYPD similarly released a statement expressing their disapproval of the move: “Our annual work to ensure a safe, enjoyable Pride season has been increasingly embraced by its participants. 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.”

Neymar accused of plotting armed assault against activist investigating homophobic claims – Business Recorder

The Brazilian football prodigy, Neymar Jr. has been accused of plotting an armed assault against Agripino Magalhaes, an LGBT activist, Brazilian media outlet LO-Bianco reports.

The plaintiff, an assistant to a Member of Parliament (MP), has filed a lawsuit with the Court of Justice of Sao Paulo. He reportedly claimed that he fears for his life.

Argipino Magalhaes also accuses Neymar’s lawyer, Davi de Paiva Costa Tangerina, of making death threats against him.

According to Magalhaes’s counsel, the activist was offered a bribe of $350,000 to shut up or he’d be killed. Meanwhile, the prosecutor claims that Agripino Magalhaes’s refusal to accept the bribe led to the plaintiff being mobbed and robbed.

It is pertinent to mention Brazilian footballer, Neymar Jr is being investigated for alleged homophobic remarks. Argipino Magalhaes is the one investigating these allegations. The activist suggests that’s why he’s been targeted.

The Brazilian footballer is being investigated for his alleged homophobic rant. Neymar Jr is said to have made hateful comments directed at his mother’s ex-boyfriend Tiago Ramos.

Ramos is said to be gay and according to Magalhaes, the striker said ‘homosexuals like Ramos should be killed and impaled alive’.

The plaintiff says he continues changing his addresses, fearing for his life. Adding that he cannot work normally due to concerns for his safety.

Magalhaes is seeking tens of thousands of dollars in compensation. According to LO-Bianco’s reports, he is seeking some $190,000 in compensation.

Keeping Up Appearances slapped with ‘woke’ warning over gay jokes… – The Irish Sun

KEEPING Up Appearances has been given a ’woke warning’ on streaming service BritBox over a series of jokes mocking immigrants and the LGBT community. 

The 90s series, which ran from 1990 to 1995, follows highly-strung social climber Hyacinth Bucket and her long-suffering husband as she attempts to appear posher than she actually is. 

Richard and Hyacinth's antics have been slapped with a content warning by Britbox

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Richard and Hyacinth’s antics have been slapped with a content warning by BritboxCredit: Shutterstock

Iconically, she insists her surname is pronounced ‘bouquet’ instead of ‘Bucket’ to sound nicer, and tries to distance herself from her siblings. 

But, according to Daily Star, several scenes contain jokes that have now been labelled as ‘containing language and attitudes of the era that may offend’. 

This includes mocking a Polish person and questioning their right to live in the UK, and referring to a man as “quent as a £4 note”. 

A spokesman for the channel told the paper: “We review and refresh BritBox’s programme catalogue on an ongoing basis. 

The bizarre antics of Hyacinth as she attempted to climb the social ladder was a firm favourite for five years.

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The bizarre antics of Hyacinth as she attempted to climb the social ladder was a firm favourite for five years.Credit: UK TV

“Programming on the service that ­contains potentially sensitive language or attitudes of their era has carried appropriate warnings since our launch in November 2019, to ensure the right guidance is in place for viewers who are choosing to watch on demand.”

Keeping Up Appearances joins a growing list of archival sitcoms that have been slapped with a warning – including notably Fawlty Towers for their ‘don’t mention the War’ episode.

Daisy and Onslow were constant annoyances of Hyacinth amid her efforts for perfect candlelight suppers.

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Daisy and Onslow were constant annoyances of Hyacinth amid her efforts for perfect candlelight suppers.Credit: Getty

The Good Life, which aired in the 70s, has also been given a warning for the presence of a ‘racist’ Golly badge. 

Use of ‘yellow face’ and racial slurs mean older episodes of Doctor Who have also been given a pre-episode warning.

BBC iPlayer have also posted a ‘woke warning’ on The Royle Family, with a small note underneath the play button stating it contains discriminatory language on an episode where Jim Royle refers to Changing Rooms’ Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen as a ‘nancy boy’.

Keeping Up Appearances is available on BritBox.

UK to host its first global LGBT conference – GOV.UK

  • Countries across the world invited to London to attend the UK’s first global LGBT conference in June 2022.
  • Safe To Be Me’ will be the largest event of its kind and will focus on making progress on legislative reform, tackling violence and discrimination, and ensuring equal access to public services for LGBT people.
  • Conference Chair Nick Herbert (Lord Herbert of South Downs) has also been appointed by the PM as the UK’s Special Envoy on LGBT rights to promote the conference and champion LGBT equality at home and abroad.

Minister for Women and Equalities, Liz Truss, alongside Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab today (16 May) announced the global event, which will bring together elected officials, policy makers, and the international LGBT community including activists, experts, and civil society to protect and promote the rights of LGBT people around the world.

‘Safe To be Me: A Global Equality Conference’ will take place 27-29 June 2022, coinciding with the 50th anniversary of the first official London Pride marches. The conference will take place in person and virtually, ensuring all can take part.

Minister for Women and Equalities, Liz Truss, said:

“I want everyone to be able to live their life free from prejudice, malice, or violence, regardless of their background or who they choose to love.

“People should be judged on the basis of their individual character and talents alone, and we want to ensure that this message is heard around the world.

“This conference will take aim at the prejudices LGBT people still face, and look at the collective action we can take to tackle those injustices alongside our international friends and partners.”

Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab, said:

“The right to live life without fear and persecution are the bedrock of inclusive and open societies and the UK, as a force for good, will protect and promote these values at home and around the world.”

“As co-chair of the Equal Rights Coalition, we are already working with 41 countries to defend the rights of LGBT people. We are urging every country to make sure LGBT people can live free from the discrimination and violence that persists today.”

The Prime Minister has today announced that Conference Chair Lord Herbert of South Downs will also take on the role of the United Kingdom’s Special Envoy on LGBT Rights. He will promote the conference internationally and lead efforts to champion LGBT equality at home and abroad. He will also be working with the Minister for Women and Equalities to coordinate a year of domestic action on LGBT issues, in the run up to the global conference.

Lord Herbert of South Downs, said:

“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.

“I am committed to the cause of advancing 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”

Across the world, 69 countries still criminalise consensual same-sex acts. The UK is considered a leader on LGBT equality, having legalised same-sex marriage and introduced one of the world’s most comprehensive legislative frameworks for protecting LGBT people from discrimination.

Evidence suggests that the COVID-19 pandemic has 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.

As co-chairs of the Equal Rights Coalition (ERC), the UK and Argentina will launch the ERC’s first Strategy and Five- Year Implementation Plan at a virtual meeting in July 2021. This comprehensive strategy will increase international action to defend the rights of LGBT people around the world.

In the lead up to the Conference there will be a series of virtual events, bringing together the UK’s key international partners with the first held on 18 May to mark International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia (IDAHOT).

The 2021 IDAHOT+ Forum will be an important moment to discuss a range of important issues including LGBT inclusive healthcare and business advocacy. It will also be the beginning of a year-long partnership with Cyprus, our friend in Europe and the Commonwealth.

Further information:

  • Details of speakers and delegates for the conference will be announced in due course.
  • The Conference will be delivered with the UK’s co-chair of the Equal Rights Coalition, Argentina and Cyprus, co-host of the Council of Europe’s LGBTI Focal Points Network IDAHOT+ Forum.
  • The Equal Rights Coalition is an intergovernmental coalition of 42 countries that are committed to protecting and promoting LGBT rights globally. It was launched in August 2016, under the leadership of Uruguay and the Netherlands at the Global LGBTI Human Rights Conference in Montevideo. The United Kingdom took over as co-chair of the ERC on 14 June 2019, in partnership with Argentina.
  • The Council of Europe’s LGBTI Focal Points Network (EFPN) is a network of 37 Council of Europe member states. It was founded in 2005 and the UK has been an active participant since inception. The EFPN meets twice a year: to celebrate the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia (IDAHOT) on/around 17 May and again in the Autumn for a policy roundtable. The UK are the current hosts for the IDAHOT+ Forum until 2022 alongside Cyprus.

Franklin Graham: Standing Strong Against Godlessness | Pontotoc Progress | djournal.com – Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal

When a society embraces godlessness, it results in anarchy–people taking the law into their own hands. The Lord warned in His Word to not embrace a lifestyle of “{span}everyone doing whatever is right in his own eyes{/span}” (Deuteronomy 12:8, ESV). Instead, Moses told God’s people to “{span}be careful to obey all {/span}{span}these words that I command you, that it may go well with you and with your children after you forever{/span}” (Deuteronomy 12:28, ESV). If we choose to reject the ways of God, we will reap devastating consequences.

Few understand this better than our nation’s law enforcement. These brave men and women have a dangerous job, and they’re always looking over their shoulders–on duty or off. Tragically, fatal officer-involved shootings are all too common today, and the need to minister to them has never been greater.

When I was younger, it was not uncommon to hear people say, “I may not agree with what you say, but I will fight for your right to say it.” As a nation, we fundamentally believed in liberty–in freedom of religion, speech, and thought.

Today, however, a radical movement is racing across our country, the United Kingdom, and many other nations, to censor and erase anyone or anything that a vocal minority finds offensive. This “woke” movement has no problem with blatant forms of sin being displayed publicly on television and the internet. But they want to ban expressions from people who embrace traditional views of morality, family, and religion. This “cancel culture” doesn’t allow for free speech. When they find a sports team, a politician, or an entertainer who stands for Biblical values, they immediately want to silence and remove them.

We experienced this in Blackpool, England, when a small but influential group of activists protested our 2018 Lancashire Festival of Hope, where I was going to be preaching the Gospel. When LGBT activists piled on Twitter, complaining about the evangelistic event because they disagree with my convictions about marriage, they pressured the local bus company to remove our ads from their vehicles. After the Festival, we filed a case in the court system to fight this injustice.

We praise God that a judge in the United Kingdom recently ruled the Blackpool Borough Council and Blackpool Transportation Services Limited had discriminated against us. It was a strong and clear rebuke.

Ruling overwhelmingly on our side, the judge said that Blackpool “had a wholesale disregard” for the Festival’s right to freedom of expression while at the same time giving obvious preference to the rights and views of the LGBT community. She said that sincerely held religious beliefs about marriage do not make the people or organizations who hold those views “extremist.”

This is a huge win in the battle against “cancel culture.” This helps every Christian and church in the U.K., confirming what we already knew to be true: All believers have the right to openly share God’s truth–including the Gospel itself–in the public square without being discriminated against, threatened, or punished by those who want to keep them quiet.

It is essential for America and the West to continue to stand up for religious liberty, which includes the rights to assemble and to speak and act on our Biblical convictions.

We cannot allow the cancel culture movement to silence the church. We must remain faithful in this season to be “speaking the truth in love” (Ephesians 4:15, ESV) as God gives the opportunity.

A recent Gallup poll showed that less than half of Americans belong to a religious group. The percentage fell from 70% in 1999 to 47% in 2020–including some who once called themselves Christian. More and more of our citizens live their lives without regular interaction, encouragement, and instruction from God’s Word through a local body of believers.

Though our nation drifts further away from the Bible, we can stand on the certainty of His promises and keep sharing His truth. Later this fall, I am planning to preach the Good News in eight cities along the historic U.S. Route 66, which is nicknamed the Main Street of America. We’re calling this the Route 66 God Loves You Tour. Please pray for these opportunities to share the Gospel through the heart of America.

Prime Minister appoints new Special Envoy on LGBT rights: 16 May 2021 – GOV.UK

He will lead efforts to champion LGBT equality at home and abroad and will chair the ‘Safe to be Me: A Global Equality Conference’ in June 2022.

Combatting harassment and violence against LGBT people is a manifesto commitment, and hosting the UK Government’s first global LGBT conference allows us to promote equality on the international stage.

Lord Herbert is Chair of the Global Equality Caucus, an international network of parliamentarians & elected representatives dedicated to tackling discrimination against LGBT people. He was a Member of the House of Commons 2005-2019 and was Chair of the UK All-Party Parliamentary Group on Global LGBT Rights 2015-2019.

As Special Envoy, Lord Herbert will bring together the Government’s domestic work and supercharge our global leadership on LGBT rights. Focusing on progressing legislative reform, tackling violence and discrimination, and ensuring equal access to public services for LGBT people. He will also be working with the Minister for Women and Equalities to coordinate a year of domestic action on LGBT issues, in the run up to the global conference.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said:

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.

I want to thank Nick for the brilliant leadership he is already playing as Chair of the international conference; and I look forward to continuing to work together in his new role as Special Envoy on LGBT rights

Nick Herbert (Lord Herbert of South Downs) said:

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.

I am committed to the cause of promoting LGBT rights worldwide and I look forward to continuing that in my role as the Prime Ministers 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.

He will commence his role immediately.

Philly Council approves resolution opposing Pa. House GOP’s anti-transgender sports bill – Pennsylvania Capital-Star

In the midst of this outpouring of transphobic legislation, some good news for the queer and trans community came on May 10 when the Biden administration restored federal nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ people in healthcare settings, essentially reinstating Obama-era protections that the Trump administration diminished.

Although resolutions do not technically pull weight in terms of influencing the state legislative process, Gilmore Richardson believes it important to communicate her voice and those of her colleagues when it comes to trans students being able to engage in athletics.

“I think silence means agreeing, and when you don’t agree with something, I think it’s our duty to speak out against what we see or hear happening, particularly in Harrisburg,” she said. “We need to let them know that discrimination, harassment or bullying, particularly against young people, is just not acceptable.”

Throughout her City Council career, Gilmore Richardson has worked to bolster minority rights, including those of LGBTQ communities.

While working as legislative aide to former Councilmember Blondell Reynolds Brown, Gilmore Richardson worked on the Equal Benefits Bill, which provided benefits for all city employees and their partners.

“I hope to continue to join with others, particularly here in our city to stand against [HB 972] and collaborate with partners like Einstein Health to provide solid data and information that’s counter to the information that’s included in the bill,” Gilmore Richardson said.”

She plans to stay informed of other issues that affect young people in Philadelphia and in the whole of Pennsylvania, “to make sure that the communities we represent, particularly young people, are safe, healthy and equitable, and that means in every way.”

City Council members were set to vote on the resolution on Thursday, May 13. In addition to the resolution’s co-sponsors, Councilmembers Jamie Gauthier, Kenyatta Johnson and Cindy Bass also plan to vote favorably.

“This bill is not about finding ways to add any equity or equality to women sports,” Bass said via email. “It’s not about trying to find ways to uplift, enhance, further, support, or in any way be of assistance to women and girls when it comes to athletics. This bill is a mean-spirited attack, and the intent behind it is clear: this is an anti-LGBTQ attack as part of a hateful Republican agenda.”

In the spirit of speaking up in the face of what many councilmembers believe to be a discriminatory bill, Gilmore Richardson added, “I just felt like we had to say something. To our other colleagues we say, ‘we are listening to what you say, but we are watching what you do.’”

Michele Zipkin is a reporter for the Philadelphia Gay News, where this story first appeared. Capital-Star Editor John L. Micek contributed additional reporting. 

Distinguished Gentlemen and Women Ride For Men’s Health – Gay Nation

Distinguished Gentleman's Ride Danilo David with his Triumph Black Bobber. (Supplied)
Distinguished Gentleman’s Ride Danilo David with his Triumph Black Bobber. (Supplied)

2 min read

On Sunday May 23, the Distinguished Gentleman’s Ride will see classic and vintage style motorcycle riders across the globe take to the streets to raise funds and awareness for prostate cancer and men’s mental health on behalf of Movember.

One such rider is leading Auckland photographer Danilo David and he is set to join the thousands taking part in the 2021 event and would love your support.

Founded in Sydney by Mark Hawwa the concept was inspired by a photo of TV Show Mad Men’s Don Draper astride a classic bike and wearing his finest suit.

Mark decided a themed ride would be a great way of connecting niche motorcycle enthusiasts and communities while raising funds to support the men in our lives.

510,000 men die from suicide globally each year. That’s one every minute the causes of suicide are complex and there’s no single reason why men take their own lives, but by improving overall mental health we can reduce the risk of suicide.

Prostate cancer is the second most commonly diagnosed cancer in men. Prostate cancer only affects men, as women do not have a prostate gland and one of the most worrying aspects of the disease is that most prostate cancers develop without men experiencing any symptoms in the early stages.

Since 2012 more than 340,000 classic and vintage riders have taken part in the Distinguished Gentleman’s ride from 107 countries across the globe.

With more than $35 million raised so far Men’s Health, Danilo would love to see everyone in Australia and New Zealand get behind this important cause.

“Men die on average six years earlier than women and for largely preventable reasons,” Danilo explained.

“The number of men that are suffering is growing, and we need to do something about that.

“So, before I press my tweed and polish my boots, I’m asking you to join me in raising funds and awareness for these causes by donating what you can for this meaningful cause and to help the men we love, live happier and healthier lives.”

Danilo David (Supplied)
Danilo David (Supplied)

The Distinguished Gentleman’s Ride takes place on Sunday May 23 and Danilo will be riding a Triumph Black Bobber.

For more information to donate to this wonderful event go here.

Last Updated on May 16, 2021

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PHOTOS: Harry Styles looks sharp on the sets of My Policeman with co star David Dawson in UK – PINKVILLA

Harry Styles, who is playing the role of a gay policeman, was seen in his navy blue cop outfit as he shot for scenes with David Dawson. Check out the photos below.

Harry Styles photos from My Policeman sets. PHOTOS: Harry Styles looks sharp on the sets of My Policeman with co star David Dawson in UK.

From one movie to the next! Harry Styles is one busy bee as the singer-actor has been shooting almost non-stop. After he wrapped up the filming of girlfriend Olivia Wilde’s film Don’t Worry Darling, Harry Styles was back on set after a short break. For the unversed, Styles has begun shooting for his next film My Policeman in which he stars opposite Emma Corrin and David Dawson. 

Over the weekend, Harry was snapped shooting for the film in Brighton, England, with both his co-stars. Harry, who is playing the role of a gay policeman, was seen in his navy blue cop outfit. The actor looked sharp as he was seen shooting on a street with blue booths. 

He was seen sharing screen space with David Dawson as the scene involved them stepping out of a vintage car and walking towards the booth. Harry and David were also snapped doing a small run towards the booth. Meanwhile, last week Harry was also seen shooting with co-star and The Crown actress Emma Corrin. The duo were shooting in Brighton and looked relaxed and chatty in their casual yet stylish outfits. 

Take a look at the photos below:

Directed by Michael Grandage, My Policeman is set in the 1990s and the film travels back and forth and recounts tales of a time when homosexuality was illegal. 

ALSO READ: Harry Styles to completely strip down for sex scenes with David Dawson in next film My Policeman

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WATCH: Passing Showers Sunday Plus A Warming Trend Late Week! – 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

News from Around America | News, Sports, Jobs – Wheeling Intelligencer

W.Va. WW II Vet Becomes Nation’s Oldest Organ Donor

WELCH, W.Va. (AP) — A World War II veteran who passed away recently has proven that it’s possible to keep helping others by giving the gift of life and becoming the oldest recorded organ donor in United States history.

Cecil F. Lockhart of Welch was 95 years old when he passed away May 4 after a short illness.

He served his country during World War II and contributed to his community by mining coal for more than 50 years, and his desire to serve others continued when his donated liver aided a 62-year-old woman.

The Center for Organ Recovery & Education (CORE) announced Monday that Lockhart’s decision to help others after death made him the oldest recorded organ donor in United States history. This distinction was confirmed by the United Network for Organ Sharing. Lockhart’s family said he was moved to become an organ donor following the death of his son, Stanley, in 2010, after which Stanley healed the lives of 75 people through tissue donation and restored sight to two others through cornea donation.

Bill Davis, who is Sharon White’s husband, said that Lockhart served in the Pacific Theater of Operations during World War II, and was “on the ground” during the fighting in the Philippines. Davis said his father-in-law would be “ecstatic” to know that his decision has helped a person already.

NYC Pride Parade Bans Cops; Gay Officers ‘Disheartened’

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.

Pipeline Operator Says That ‘Normal Operations’ Resume

ATLANTA (AP) — The operator of the nation’s largest gasoline pipeline — hit on May 7th by a ransomware attack — announced Saturday that it has resumed “normal operations,” delivering fuel to its markets, including a large swath of the East Coast.

Georgia-based Colonial Pipeline had begun the process of restarting the pipeline’s operations on Wednesday evening, warning it could take several days for the supply chain to return to normal.

“Since that time, we have returned the system to normal operations, delivering millions of gallons per hour to the markets we serve,” Colonial Pipeline said in a tweet Saturday. Those markets include Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, South and North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Washington D.C., Delaware, Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

“All of these markets are now receiving product from our pipeline,” the company said, noting how its employees across the pipeline “worked safely and tirelessly around the clock to get our lines up and running.”

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NYC Pride parade bans police; Gay officers ‘disheartened’ – Wheeling Intelligencer

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)

By LARRY NEUMEISTER Associated Press

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.”

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What new laws in Montana and South Dakota say about religious freedom – Deseret News

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Six years ago, Indiana lawmakers’ efforts to pass a new religious freedom law spawned protests, travel bans and boycott threats from national athletic organizations, including the NCAA, NFL and NBA.

This year, when Montana and South Dakota passed similar legislation, the backlash was so muted by comparison that even some religious freedom experts didn’t hear about the bills until the Deseret News sent an interview request.

The stark difference in responses shows that the reputation of state-level religious freedom protections is improving, even as battles over their impact on gay rights continue to rage, said Tim Schultz, president of the 1st Amendment Partnership in Washington, D.C.

“Debates over these bills aren’t reaching the same level of DEFCON 3 culture war as they did six or seven years ago,” he said.

However, Schultz added that he doesn’t expect conflict over religious freedom laws to ever entirely die out, since the protections they offer are often broad enough to put both conservatives and liberals on edge.

“It’s like Democratic Rep. Steve Solarz, who pushed for federal religious freedom protections, once said, and this is a paraphrase, ‘Religious freedom is always very popular in theory, but it can be very unpopular in specific instances,’” he said.

History of RFRAs

The laws Schultz describes are called religious freedom restoration acts, or RFRAs (pronounced riff-rahs) for short. Although they come in different forms, all varieties seek to prevent the government from interfering with religious activity except in cases where there’s no other way to achieve important public policy goals.

The first RFRA was passed by Congress in 1993 in response to a Supreme Court ruling that weakened religious protections offered by the First Amendment. The bill was written to apply to both state and federal governments, but that didn’t stop two states — Connecticut and Rhode Island — from quickly passing RFRAs of their own.

In 1997, the Supreme Court said Congress didn’t have the power to apply the religious freedom law to the states, which prompted 14 more states to pass RFRAs over the next 13 years.

During that era, RFRA bills “largely enjoyed bipartisan support” because they were seen to offer needed protections to members of minority faiths, Schultz said. They were associated with Native Americans fighting for the right to use otherwise illegal drugs in sacred rituals or Jehovah’s Witnesses who needed to be saved from working on their Sabbath.

But consensus around the laws didn’t last.

In 2013, nearly all Republican legislators and around two-thirds of Democrats in Kansas and Kentucky voted in favor of new religious freedom laws. The next year, only four total Democrats voted in favor of RFRA bills proposed in five different states.

“Over a period of just one legislative cycle, the politics of RFRA went from pretty darn bipartisan to almost purely partisan,” Schultz said.

Multiple factors contributed to this shift, including conservative faith groups’ use of the federal law to challenge the Affordable Care Act’s birth control mandate. But most notably, state-level RFRA bills became inextricably linked to growing conflict over LGBTQ rights, Schultz said.

“Some conservative lawmakers began to promote RFRAs as an antidote to court action on gay marriage,” he said. In response, “progressives mobilized to stop them.”

In 2014, a RFRA bill in Arizona faced such intense national pushback that the Republican governor vetoed it. The next year, Indiana lawmakers and then-Gov. Mike Pence faced an even stronger backlash, which led the legislature to update its newly passed RFRA law to limit its application.

Until this year, no state had passed a RFRA since 2015, Schultz said.

Political problems

As Schultz noted, conservative lawmakers are partly responsible for sinking RFRA’s reputation. By presenting the bills as a way to undermine gay rights, they invited attacks on the whole concept of religious freedom.

“If state RFRAs are tethered to the issue of LGBTQ rights, they’re going to have a lot of political problems,” Schultz said.

Indiana proved that, wrote Douglas Laycock, a professor of law and religious studies at the University of Virginia, in an email. Conservative politicians there openly talked about how their RFRA bill would shield Christians from discrimination claims.

“Indiana Republicans didn’t care about Amish buggies or Orthodox Jews with beards or strict Sabbath requirements or neighbors objecting when churches tried to feed the homeless or any of the other traditional beneficiaries of RFRAs. They cared about conservative Christians and same-sex marriage,” he said.

However, Laycock and other religious freedom advocates have also long been frustrated with RFRA’s many critics.

Amid growing polarization, liberal politicians and LGBTQ rights activists have missed — or willfully ignored — the fact that religious freedom protections remain more likely to benefit members of minority faiths than Christians who opposed same-sex marriage, Laycock said.

“The gay rights and progressive reaction against state RFRAs was bizarre, and some of the things they said were ridiculous. States with older RFRAs boycotted travel to states enacting newer RFRAs,” he said.

Today, Democratic politicians and left-leaning religious organizations sometimes claim that religious freedom laws have become a “license to discriminate.” That helps explain why the Equality Act, a federal bill that would update civil rights laws to protect members of the LGBTQ community, aims to limit the application of the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

Developments like that proposed limitation are “mostly a function of our polarization and the deep mistrust that each side has of the other,” Laycock said.

In reality, RFRA laws are both less powerful and more valuable to minority faiths than most people understand, Schultz said.

“These bills are not the sort of supercharged religious freedom protection that some conservatives would like them to be. But neither are they the kind of culture war thing that progressives portrayed them as,” he said.

Research done in 2016 by Christopher Lund, who is now a law professor at Wayne State University in Michigan, showed that RFRAs were rarely cited in legal cases and even more rarely used to sidestep LGBTQ anti-discrimination rules.

Then, as in the past, religious freedom laws primarily benefitted people of faith who lacked the clout to force legislators to respond to their needs, he wrote, noting cases in which a Muslim prisoner won the right to avoid cross-gender pat-downs and Orthodox Jews successfully challenged no-beard policies enforced by police and fire departments.

“Whatever else can be said of them, (the federal) RFRA and state RFRAs have been valuable for religious minorities, who often have no other recourse when the law conflicts with their most basic religious obligations,” Lund said.

Religious freedom for all

Emphasizing that message, instead of resistance to LGBTQ rights, likely helped lawmakers in Montana and South Dakota pass RFRA bills this year, Schultz said.

“My hypothesis is that we’re far enough away from RFRA’s association with gay rights that now it can be seen in a truer light,” he said, adding “I think people have calmed down a little bit about this.”

It’s also possible that the national organizations that pushed back against RFRAs in Arizona, Indiana and other states are just tied up right now in other political fights, wrote Lund in an email.

“A lot of things are happening right now in other areas — voting restrictions and abortion restrictions, for example. Maybe folks have been focused on that,” he said.

Whatever the explanation, Schultz is glad to see the culture war surrounding RFRAs dying down. But he’s also confident that the laws will never again be as popular as they were when Congress crafted the first one.

“I’m not making the claim that they’re going to totally bounce back,” he said.

The problem is — and really always has been — that religious freedom laws can benefit even the most unpopular faith groups and religion-related causes, Schultz said. To support the passage of a RFRA, you must accept that it could someday be used by one of your political enemies, like a landlord who wouldn’t house unwed couples or a pastor helping migrants enter the U.S. illegally.

“That was the challenge back in 1993,” he said. “It’s still the challenge today.”

Local school districts team up with United Way to fight dropout rates – Huntington Herald Dispatch

HUNTINGTON — Local school districts are getting another boost in student support personnel as they push for a continued decline in dropout rates.

The United Way of the River Cities, The Education Alliance and local school boards in Cabell, Wayne and Mason counties have a long-standing partnership through the Education Matters program, which aims to reduce the dropout rates in the school system.

Several positions will open in those three counties for the coming school year, allowing AmeriCorps members to work directly with at-risk youth within targeted schools to focus on their attendance, behavior and course performance issues.

Both Cabell (.70%) and Mason (.50%) counties had a dropout rate of less than 1% for the 2019-20 school year, while graduation rates also were at or above the state average for the year, according to the most recent data from the West Virginia Department of Education.

That same data showed that Wayne County had a 1.40% student dropout rate across the district, while the graduation rate also dipped slightly below 85%.

Todd Alexander, superintendent of Wayne County Schools, said that the district has recently been able to create a system of student support to help improve those numbers, but they won’t know if the measures taken have been effective for another couple of years.

“We’ve been able to build a comprehensive system of support that we hope, down the road, allows those graduation numbers to really increase, and we see the benefits of it,” Alexander said.

Wayne has had AmeriCorps positions in their schools before, placing them at pre-kindergarten through eighth grade schools in Crum and Fort Gay, where Alexander said they can identify certain trends and behaviors earlier in order to get students back on the right path.

“It’s important that we have those mentors in place — that way, we can address things at the earlier grade levels and try and get them corrected sooner rather than later so that way a student isn’t falling behind, and they go on the path toward graduating,” Alexander said.

In West Virginia, students must attend school through age 17, though the state follows federal requirements by reporting dropout rates from students in grades 7-12.

Members who fill the AmeriCorps positions will be required to make an eight-month commitment to the program. A portion of the member’s time is spent in training and in service projects. Members are required to attend personal and professional development trainings through the year.

The application deadline for an AmeriCorps position is June 4, 2021. For those interested in an application or more information, contact Lena Burdette at 304-523-8929, ext. 102 or lena.burdette@unitedwayrivercities.org.

Funding for AmeriCorps positions is made possible through the Alcon Foundation and local school systems.