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Politician Charles Peruto wants macho prosecutors on gay bashings – OUTinPerth

Charles Peruto

Republican Charles ‘Chuck’ Peruto is running to be the next Attorney General of Philadelphia, and he’s put forward his idea on how hate crimes against the queer community can be better tackled.

Peruto says the answer is to make sure that the prosecutors assigned to the cases are people who could never be perceived as being gay.

Appointing a special prosecutor “who looks as opposite of gay you can imagine” was his proposal on how to tackle gay bashings.

The ‘gay bashing’ section of his website has now been taken down, but it had laid out Peruto’s thinking on the issue.

“Having tried some 300 jury trials, I know what it takes to win them,” he said.

“It would not be my preference to have a prosecutor who would be remotely perceived as gay arguing these cases before a jury.

“I would assign an older, seasoned prosecutor who looks as opposite of gay you can imagine” to deal with “nothing but this problem”.

“That is the type of assistant district attorney that can persuade the most conservative jurors to understand this problem that is unique to the gay community,” he said.

Allowing effeminate prosecutors to handle the cases has been an error in the past according to Charles Peruto.

“When you have a very effeminate male prosecutor, it could possibly be perceived that the prosecutor is going after the defendants because he’s gay,” Peruto told local news outlet  BillyPenn.

“I want to make sure we have a very macho prosecutor to defend the rights of gay people to live in harmony and in peace.”

When it came to prosecuting hate crimes where the victim was black, Peruto said he would take a different strategy, appointing black prosecutors to cases that involved race.

OIP Staff


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NYC Pride parade bans police; Gay officers ‘disheartened’ – WBOY.com

NYC Pride parade bans police; Gay officers ‘disheartened’ – WBOY.com





























Covid pandemic causes domestic violence, mental distress among LGBT+ people in Pakistan – The New Indian Express

By ANI

ISLAMABAD: The coronavirus pandemic has resulted in reports of domestic violence and mental distress among LGBT+ people. It is difficult to find partners due to Covid-19 restrictions and the return of many people to their family homes.

The COVID-19 pandemic has made being LGBT+ in Pakistan significantly more difficult in a country where these communities already face numerous challenges, including systemic oppression, social stigma and a legal ban on homosexual acts, reported DW News Agency.

Activists are concerned that the increased alienation and barriers to meeting people is negatively affecting mental health within LGBT+ communities.

Mani, a 36-year-old human rights defender, identifies as a transgender man. His organization called HOPE has carried out several studies on the impact of COVID on his community.

He told DW that more cases of domestic violence among gay and transgender partners had been reported during the lockdowns, as the financial and emotional stress led to more clashes, especially for transgender women.

“Some trans women enjoy having a masculine boyfriend because he can make her feel more feminine and loved, but, during COVID, we saw that many women reported more domestic violence,” Mani said.

LGBT+ communities have some of the highest rates of suicide in Pakistan, as well as reports of self-harm and mental health problems.

Mani said communities had stigmatized themselves in some ways by reinforcing sexual identity as an act of defiance.

“Sex is a natural need, and, because our community is so marginalized, we talk about sex more openly among ourselves, which has stereotyped LGBT people as being more sexual,” he said, stressing that this stereotype of being hypersexual can also create barriers to finding stable romantic partnerships.

In 1860 colonial British government had criminalised homosexual activities in India establishing them as crimes that can result in life imprisonment or even death by stoning.

Though these laws are seldom enforced by officials, as gay and queer activities remain largely clandestine, those identifying as LGBT+ rarely come out to their families.

When family members do come out or are found out to be queer, they face threats of violence and disownment. This is why some LGBT+ Pakistanis often move out of their family homes to pursue more freedom to explore their identity and sexuality.

However, during the pandemic, exploration and independence have become increasingly perilous for some, reported DW News Agency.

Usman, 32, who works for a multinational company in Abbottabad, a city slightly north of the capital, Islamabad, told DW that during the pandemic he has only managed to meet his long-distance boyfriend once every three months.

“My boyfriend is 25 and living with his family in Gujranwala, so he doesn’t have the same freedom to leave his house,” he said. “With the lockdowns and travel restrictions in place, our meetups have become more difficult.”

Though Usman prefers monogamy, he and his partner have an agreement that they are free to explore physical relationships with other men, because of the nature of their long-distance relationship.

Such meetings are largely facilitated by social media, online groups and dating applications. Due to the pandemic, however, Usman said that usage of dating apps and the possibility of actual meetups have been considerably reduced.

During the fasting month of Ramzan, Usman said many men were also abstaining from casual sex and hook-ups, as many gay men negatively internalise their sexuality as something shameful or wrong.

Pakistan has more than 873,000 COVID-19 cases and over 19,000 deaths. On May 8, the government imposed a 10-day nationwide lockdown to curb the spread of the virus ahead of the Eid al-Fitr holiday.

Online dating has also suffered a few setbacks. Prime Minister Imran Khan banned the use of dating apps such as Tinder and Grindr earlier last year in order to curb “un-Islamic behaviour”, reported DW News Agency.

However, Saad said, there are lesser-known apps and VPNs through which users can still meet each other.

Dating app users have also found ways around the pandemic by offering more transparency about their health.

Legislation bars ‘gay panic’ defense in Oregon murder cases – Blue Mountain Eagle

A suspect could not assert so-called “gay panic” as a legal defense against second-degree murder in Oregon under a bill that is headed to Gov. Kate Brown.

The Oregon House passed Senate Bill 704 without amendment on a 54-0 vote Thursday.

The bill would bar the discovery of a victim’s sexual orientation or gender identity as a reasonable explanation for someone undergoing an extreme emotional disturbance as an affirmative defense to second-degree murder. A person would not be justified in using physical force against another person upon discovery of the victim’s sexual orientation or gender identity.

Disney World may soon go mask free for the vaccinated.

If the bill is signed, Oregon would join 13 other states, plus Washington, D.C., with similar laws. The Oregon Senate passed it, 29-1, on April 14; Republican Dallas Heard of Roseburg was the lone opponent.

Though Senate Bill 704 does not bear anyone’s name unlike bills in other states, its passage comes less than a year after the stabbing death of Aja Raquell Rhone-Stevens, a 32-year-old transgender woman, in July 2020 in northeast Portland. She was attending a vigil for another homicide victim. No one has been arrested in connection with the case.

Rhone-Stevens was one of a record 44 deaths tallied in 2020 by the Human Rights Campaign, a national advocacy group for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning (LGBTQ) people. Many of the victims are transgender people of color. The organization has tallied 23 deaths so far this year.

“When we finally see justice for Aja’s murder, we can ensure that, when we show up to the courtroom, her memory won’t be insulted by someone trying to use the panic defense to justify her death,” Dana Spears, her sister, said in a statement after the House vote. “I’m thankful to everyone in the community who used their voice for Aja, and saw this bill passed.”

The legislation was one of the priorities of Basic Rights Oregon, the state’s leading LGBTQ advocacy group.

“This legislation states, unequivocally, in Oregon, there is never an excuse for violence against transgender people,” Mikki Gillette said on behalf of the group.

Under current state law, a suspect can assert an affirmative defense to second-degree murder if the extreme emotional disturbance is not the result of the person’s own intentional, knowing, reckless or criminally negligent act and if there is a reasonable explanation for the disturbance.

“These cases often involve incredible and brutal acts of violence,” Rep. Karin Power, D-Milwaukie, the bill’s floor manager, said during House debate. “Defendants use these defenses to avoid full accountability on the grounds that actual or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity is reasonable in and of itself to be considered adequate provocation.

“Passage of this bill would send a strong and proactive message that the perpetrator of a second-degree murder will not be able to excuse the crime simply based on who the victim is.”

Power, a lesbian, is one of four House chief sponsors of the bill.

Chief sponsor Rep. Rob Nosse, D-Portland, who has identified as gay for 30 years, said he considered himself lucky that he was unable to think of a negative long-term consequence to himself or his husband for being gay.

“But I know that is not true for every LGBT person in our state and country,” he said.

Nosse said of the 2020 death of Rhone-Stevens: “When we finally see justice for her murder, we want to ensure that we can show up to the courtroom and her memory is not insulted by someone trying to use the panic defense for her death.”

Also a chief sponsor is Rep. Janeen Sollman, D-Hillsboro, who said transgender women of color are more likely to be the targets of violence.

“Many of these attacks are motivated by nothing other than the victim’s gender or orientation,” she said. “I have heard from constituents, friends and family on how important the passage of this bill is to them,” including a nephew who sent her a text message.

“I was proud to say to him that I do know,” she said.

Rep. Anna Williams is a Democrat from Hood River whose district includes Sandy, where a gay pride rally drew a counterprotest two months ago.

“A law that excuses criminal behavior against certain groups of people is essentially a law that diminishes the humanity of that group,” Williams said. “The existence of the LGBTQ panic defense means that as a state, we sanction violence against members of this community.”

Partners unveil brand new look as owners insist everyone is welcome amid ‘rumours’ – centralfifetimes.com

ONE of Cowdenbeath’s most popular bars has revealed its fresh look following lockdown as its new owners insist everyone is welcome.

Partners has undergone a post-pandemic refurb and last month unveiled its new-look beer garden which has had a fantastic reception by locals.

However, one of the new owners, Stuart, has hit out at ‘certain publicans’ who have been spreading malicious rumours that Partners is now an exclusively gay bar – something which is very far from the truth.

Stuart took to social media to quash talk of the rumours, insisting that Partners is, and always will be, open to everyone, adding that just because he and his partner are gay does not mean the bar is exclusive to anyone.

Speaking to the Times, Stuart said: “We have taken over recently and done a massive refurb, but there are certain publicans in the area who are not happy about it, and are not happy about us spending a lot of money on the pub, and have been saying to people in the area that it is now a gay bar.

“My partner is the son of the previous owner, Andrew Kirk, so nothing has changed, we have always been here. In all my years in Cowdenbeath nobody has ever had a problem with me being gay.

“We had a wonderful reaction to the post on Facebook and we have had a great reaction since opening.

“The people who are unhappy are almost saying that Cowdenbeath does not deserve somewhere with a bit of taste.”

While Partners is Stuart’s priority, he said he will soon be reaching out to other businesses so they can work collaboratively to make the area more appealing.

He said: “I want to speak to other pubs in the area, Cowdenbeath and Lochgelly, to try and improve the whole area so people want to stay instead of always going across to Edinburgh for a drink.

“Since reopening we’ve had groups of women sitting in the beer garden with a bottle of prosecco – that would never have happened before.”

The total refurb of the downstairs area cost in the region of £130k, and they have plans to turn the upstairs into a sports bar and karaoke so there is something for everyone.

Stuart added: “The kitchen is being worked on at the moment and the whole pub should be ready to fully reopen in time for May 17.

“Despite the bad reputation Partners has had down the years, it has always been an inclusive place.”

Weymouth gay bar has plans to expand approved – Dorset Echo

DORSET Council has granted proposals for a Weymouth bar and adjoining nightclub to operate under one licence, despite previous objections.

The Closet Bar and Nightclub and adjoining Somewhere Else Bar, on the corner of Maiden Street and St Edmund Street, has been given permission to be transformed into one larger venue and will now operate under one licence.

The Closet has now taken out the partition walls to make a double walkway through the building connecting the two internally – with a bar on one side and a nightclub on the other. The new licence also enables the business to operate with one entrance and exit instead of two, giving door staff more control of people entering and leaving the premises.

Environmental Health, Weymouth Town Council and Respect Weymouth had previously objected to the application, voicing their concerns about the potential impacts of having one licence instead of two – including noise levels from the premises and anti-social behaviour in nearby streets.

Owner of The Closet, Jamie Crage, said that he believed that trading as one business, as it used to do in the past, would result in the area being quieter and would also result in a reduction of around 150 in overall capacity which, together with a change in music policy, would also help reduce noise.

The building variation application was granted but Dorset Council has given the expanded bar and nightclub new additional conditions it must operate under.

The new conditions aim to prevent any crime or disorder and includes the requirement for the bar to have an additional CCTV camera installed towards Mitchell Street and to follow a Noise Management Plan whereby the bar will need to adopt a ‘cooling down’ period where music volume is reduced at 2am to background music only and the area closed at 3am.

Mr Crage said: “Because of some of the alterations we’ve had to make to soundproof the building it has reduced the capacity as it was if they were two separate bars, but on a whole I think we’ll be able to offer a better experience at The Closet now. Sometimes less is a bit more.

“I’m happy that it’s been approved. We took on the concerns of neighbours and tried to make things better for everyone. We’re opening on the 17th May with table service in both spaces of the bar. There’s lots of things planned, lots of entertainment booked some drag queens and cabaret, etc.

“We’ve been shut seven months so we’re looking forward to opening back up again.

“I think it’s a much needed space in Weymouth and it’s good to promote the diversity of Weymouth as well.”

China makes history with successful Mars landing – Yahoo News

The Conversation

Why the Al-Aqsa Mosque has often been a site of conflict

Muslims pray at the Mihrab, a niche in a wall indicating the direction of the Kaaba in Mecca, at the Foundation Stone, located under the Dome of the Rock in the Al- Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem’s Old City. Thomas Coex/AFP via Getty ImagesThe violence that spread from Jerusalem to cities across Israel and the Palestinian territories, leaving at least 60 dead so far, has both historical and contemporary roots. In recent weeks, tension has flared over the eviction of Palestinian families in Sheikh Jarrah, East Jerusalem, Israeli authorities blocking access to the important Damascus Gate plaza during Ramadan, and a march of thousands of Israeli ultra-nationalists through the city on May 6, 2021, in celebration of “Jerusalem Day,” which marks the capture of East Jerusalem in 1967. But the one incident that led to a significant escalation involved Israeli security forces firing rubber-coated bullets, tear gas and stun grenades at worshipers gathered at Al-Aqsa mosque on May 7. As a scholar of global Islam, I teach introduction to Islam and include a discussion about Al-Aqsa as part of the syllabus. That’s because Al-Aqsa has deep religious significance for Muslims around the world. But, it is also important to highlight its remarkable political relevance for Palestinians. These two facts make it a focal point for conflict. The night journey of Muhammad The Masjid al-Aqsa, or simply Al-Aqsa, means “the farthest mosque” or “the farthest sanctuary,” and refers to the lead-domed mosque within the sacred precinct of Haram al-Sharif – “the Noble Enclosure.” The precinct includes the Dome of the Rock, the four minarets, the compound’s historic gates and the mosque itself. Mentioned in Sura 17, verse 1 of the Quran, the mosque is linked to the story of Muhammad’s “Isra” – the “night journey” from Mecca to Jerusalem – that in part confirms him as the last and most authoritative of the prophets for Muslims. The Quran says the prophet was “carried…by night from the Sacred Mosque [in Mecca] to the Farthest Mosque [al-Aqsa], whose precincts we have blessed.” From there, it is believed that Muhammad ascended to heaven – called the Mir’aj. The Dome of the Rock – Qubbat as-Sakhra – is said to shelter the rock from where Muhammad physically ascended. The mosque’s origins stretch back to the seventh century. It was first built in A.D. 637, just five years after the prophet’s death. It has been destroyed, rebuilt and renovated multiple times. The current building largely dates to the 11th century and hosts daily prayers and Friday gatherings that draw large crowds. It lies adjacent to important Jewish and Christian religious locales, particularly the site of the First and Second Jewish Temples. At times, the Dome of the Rock – a shrine – and Al-Aqsa – a mosque – have been confused as one and the same. While part of the same “Noble Sanctuary,” they are two distinct buildings with different histories and purposes. However, the term Al-Aqsa is sometimes used to indicate the entire “Noble Sanctuary” complex. Originally, it is believed that the term “the farthest sanctuary” referred to Jerusalem as a whole. Place in Islamic history After Mecca and Medina, the vast majority of Muslims worldwide consider Jerusalem the third holiest place on Earth. Referenced frequently in Islamic tradition and hadith – records of something the Prophet Muhammad said, did or tacitly approved of – it is believed that while in Mecca, Muhammad originally oriented his community’s prayers toward Al-Aqsa. In A.D. 622, the community fled Mecca because of persecution, seeking refuge in Medina to the north. After a little over a year there, Muslims believe God instructed Muhammad to face back toward Mecca for prayers. In Surah 2, verses 149-150, the Quran says, “turn thy face toward the Sacred Mosque [the Kaaba in Mecca]…wheresoever you may be, turn your faces toward it.” Nonetheless, Jerusalem and its sacred locales – specifically Al-Aqsa and the Dome of the Rock – have remained sites of Islamic pilgrimage for 15 centuries. The ‘most sensitive site’ in conflict The decorated interior of the golden dome inside the Dome of the Rock mosque at the Al-Aqsa mosque compound, in Jerusalem’s Old City. Thomas Coex/AFP via Getty Images Given its sacred significance, there was great concern about the precinct’s fate after Israel’s victory in the 1967 Arab-Israeli War and its subsequent annexation of East Jerusalem. Although Israel granted jurisdiction of the mosque and complex to an Islamic waqf – “endowment” – Israel still commands access to the grounds and security forces regularly perform patrols and conduct searches within the precinct. Under the Preservation of the Holy Places Law, the Israeli government has also allowed entry to different religious groups – such as Christian pilgrims. Many Israelis respect the sanctity of the place as the holiest site in Judaism. In 2005, the chief rabbinate of Israel said it is forbidden for Jews to walk on the site to avoid accidentally entering the Holy of Holies – the inner sanctum of the Temple, believed to be God’s dwelling place on earth. Nonetheless, certain ultra-Orthodox Jewish groups controversially advocate for greater access and control of the site, seeking to reclaim the historic Temple Mount, in order to rebuild the Temple. Described as “the most sensitive site in the Israel-Palestinian conflict,” it has frequently been host to political acts. For example, in August 1969, an Australian Christian named Dennis Michael Rohan attempted to burn down Al-Aqsa, destroying the historically significant and intricately carved minbar – or “pulpit” – of Saladin, a treasured piece of Islamic art. Israeli security forces fire sound grenades inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in the Old City of Jerusalem on Aug. 11, 2019. Ahmad Gharabli/AFP via Getty Images On Sept. 28, 2000, Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon and a delegation guarded by hundreds of Israeli riot police entered the precinct. This sparked protests and a violent crackdown by Israeli authorities, with multiple casualties. Many Muslims worldwide considered this a “desecration” of the sacred mosque, and the event helped ignite the Second Intifada, or Palestinian uprising. Tensions peaked again after an attack on Yehuda Glick, a controversial right-wing rabbi, in autumn 2014. In response, Israeli authorities closed down access to Al-Aqsa for the first time since 1967. In March and April of that year, Israeli police used tear gas and stun grenades on Palestinians inside Al-Aqsa, prompting international outcry. Numerous other incidents between Israeli forces and worshipers have occurred at Al-Aqsa in recent years. Controlled access to the site reminds Palestinians of their relative powerlessness in their ongoing land disputes with Israeli authorities. At the same time, attacks at Al-Aqsa resonate with Muslims across the world who react with horror to what they see as the desecration of one of their most sacred sites. Defending Al-Aqsa and fighting for rights to access it, I argue, have become proxy conflicts for both Palestinian claims and the need to defend Islam as a whole. [This week in religion, a global roundup each Thursday. Sign up.] Editor’s note: The piece has been updated to add details related to Jewish beliefs about the site.This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. It was written by: Ken Chitwood, Concordia College New York. Read more:Why genocide survivors can offer a way to heal from the trauma of the pandemic yearJerusalem attacks are no isolated incident: the third intifada is hereWhat will Trump’s declaration on Jerusalem mean to Palestinians? Ken Chitwood does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Hughes’ RBI triple lifts Abilene Wylie past El Paso Andress in one-game baseball playoff – Abilene Reporter-News

Wylie's Dash Albus, right, sails past El Paso Andress pitcher Julius Ryan en route to scoring in the second inning. Ryan was chasing down an errant throw home, and Albus had to throw him out of the way to score in the Region I-5A area one-game playoff Friday in Fort Stockton. Wylie won 3-2.

FORT STOCKTON – Reed Hughes’ two-out, RBI triple snapped a 2-2 tie in the fifth inning, and Wylie hung on to beat El Paso Andress 3-2 in a one-game area baseball playoff Friday at Panther Baseball Field.

The Bulldogs (23-7) advance to play either Canutillo or Canyon Randall in the Region I-5A quarterfinals next week.

Balin Valentine slid under the tag on Jaxon Hansen’s fielder’s choice ground ball to third to put Wylie up 1-0 in the first inning, and Balentine scored on Riley Hood’s two-out single in the second for a 2-0 lead.

Brooks Gay took over for Wylie starter Dash Albus to start the fifth, and Jose Rosales greeted him with a single. Aaron Bazan then came up with an RBI double. Bazan took third on the throw to first on a dropped third strike to Gonzales and scored on a wild pitch, tying the game at 2.

Landon Williams came up with one-out double in the fifth, and Hughes chased him home with a two-out triple for a 3-2 lead.

Albus got the win, allowing a hit and three walks while striking out four in four innings. Gay collected the save, giving up two runs on two hits. He struck four and walked one.

Andress starter Julius Ryan took the loss. He gave up three runs on four hits. Ryan struck out three and walked four in 4⅔ innings. Bazan worked the final 1⅓ innings. He gave up two hits, including Hughes’ game-winner, walked one and struck out one.

(The story will be updated later)

Joey D. Richards covers Abilene high schools and colleges, Big Country schools and other local sports. Follow him at Twitter at ARN_Joey. If you appreciate locally driven news, you can support local journalists with a digital subscription to ReporterNews.com.

Zachary Quinto, Billy Porter To Voice Gay Dads On New Disney+ Series – HuffPost

“The Proud Family” is going to look a lot more diverse when it returns next year. 

Disney+ this week unveiled artwork and voice cast additions for the forthcoming reboot of the beloved animated series, which concluded its original run 16 years ago. 

The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder,” slated for a 2022 release, will star Zachary Quinto and Billy Porter as Randall and Barry Leibowitz-Jenkins. The characters are described as a mixed-race gay couple who are the adoptive parents of 14-year-old activist Maya Leibowitz-Jenkins, to be voiced by Keke Palmer

Randall and Barry Leibowitz-Jenkins. 



Randall and Barry Leibowitz-Jenkins. 

EJ Johnson, who is the son of NBA legend Magic Johnson, is also joining the cast as Michael Collins, described in press notes as a gender-nonconforming trendsetter who serves up “fierce looks at school and on the basketball court.” Michael was voiced by Phil LaMarr in the original series.

The character of Michael Collins will be voiced by EJ Johnson.



The character of Michael Collins will be voiced by EJ Johnson.

“The Proud Family” was hailed as a culturally inclusive milestone for children’s entertainment when it premiered on the Disney Channel in 2001. The original series followed the adventures of Penny Proud (Kyla Pratt), a 14-year-old Black girl, and her eccentric family. 

A holiday-themed episode in the show’s debut season won praise for exploring the traditions of Kwanzaa. Meanwhile, fans may recall the show’s infectious theme song, which was performed by Destiny’s Child and Solange Knowles

A made-for-TV feature film, “The Proud Family Movie,” aired in 2005 as the series finale. 

Last year, Disney+ announced that most of the original “Proud Family” cast would return for the reboot. In addition to Pratt, “The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder” will feature Tommy Davidson as Oscar Proud, Paula Jai Parker as Trudy Proud, Cedric the Entertainer as Uncle Bobby and Soleil Moon Frye as Zoey Howzer. 

In recent weeks, Quinto has been making the festival rounds with Jim Parsons to promote the documentary “Tennessee & Truman: An Intimate Conversation,” in which the two actors provide voiceovers as writers Tennessee Williams (Quinto) and Truman Capote (Parsons). 

Porter currently stars in FX’s “Pose,” which kicked off its third and final season earlier this month. Later this year, he’ll be seen as the Fab G ― a genderless fairy godparent ― in the new film adaptation of “Cinderella,” starring Camila Cabello. 

Gay teen shares video of her homophobic Christian grandmother performing an EXORCISM on her – Daily Mail

A lesbian teen has shared a shocking video of her allegedly anti-gay Christian grandmother performing what appears to be an exorcism outside of her bedroom, calling it ‘religious abuse.’

Selia Brookes, who says she is ‘gay, gay, gay’ in her TikTok profile, shared a video of her relative denouncing ‘foul spirits’ and ‘lying spirits’ while touching the door with her finger. 

‘Satan, I rebuke you, in the name of Jesus, in the name above all names! Praise you, Jesus!’ the woman shouts before turning and walking down the hallway. 

Scroll down for video  

Hard to handle: Gay teen Selia Brookes shared a video of her allegedly anti-gay Christian grandmother performing what appears to be an exorcism outside of her bedroom

Hard to handle: Gay teen Selia Brookes shared a video of her allegedly anti-gay Christian grandmother performing what appears to be an exorcism outside of her bedroom

Awful: The grandmother touched the bedroom door with her finger as she rebuked Satan and praised Jesus before turning and walking away

Awful: The grandmother touched the bedroom door with her finger as she rebuked Satan and praised Jesus before turning and walking away

Brookes closes the door and starts to cry, prompting the person who is filming to turn off the camera. 

‘If you’re wondering what religious abuse is, here,’ she captioned the clip. 

The teen, who is believed to be American, used the hashtag #emancipation, suggesting that she is considering legally separating from her parents before she turns 18. 

The video, which has been viewed more than 250,000 times, has received an outpouring of support from other TikTok users, including other Christians. 

‘There’s no hate like Christian love,’ one person wrote, while another added: ‘As a Christian I’ll never understand how they think this is okay. This is the complete opposite of what God stands for. 

Heartbeaking: Brookes accused her of 'religious abuse' in the caption of the video, which shows her crying after her grandmother walked away

Heartbeaking: Brookes accused her of ‘religious abuse’ in the caption of the video, which shows her crying after her grandmother walked away 

Support: The video, which has been viewed more than 250,000 times, has received an outpouring of support from other TikTok users, including other Christians

Support: The video, which has been viewed more than 250,000 times, has received an outpouring of support from other TikTok users, including other Christians

‘As a Christian, if she no longer wants to be religious after this, I would understand,’ someone else commented. ‘I’m sick and tired of people like that.’ 

Brookes has since shared TikToks of herself with her girlfriend using the hashtags #gaycouples and #lgbtq. 

Many people assumed the woman in the video was her mother, but in a follow-up clip that was posted on Friday, she revealed it was her grandmother. 

The video shows her grandmother rambling about when she turns 18, calling her girlfriend a ‘blood-sucking leech.’ 

Horrible: On Friday, Brookes shared a follow-up video of her grandmother calling her girlfriend a 'blood-sucking leech'

Horrible: On Friday, Brookes shared a follow-up video of her grandmother calling her girlfriend a 'blood-sucking leech'

Horrible: On Friday, Brookes shared a follow-up video of her grandmother calling her girlfriend a ‘blood-sucking leech’

Couple: Brookes shared TikToks of herself with her girlfriend using the hashtags #gaycouples and #lgbtq

Couple: Brookes shared TikToks of herself with her girlfriend using the hashtags #gaycouples and #lgbtq

Going viral: The teen's original exorcism video has been shared on Twitter, where people tweeted their support for her

Going viral: The teen’s original exorcism video has been shared on Twitter, where people tweeted their support for her 

‘She is picking up her stuff and heading out. I just texted my mom about it,’ Brookes replies. ‘Why are you being that way?’ 

‘This is how my grandmother talks to my girlfriend,’ Brookes explained in the caption.   

The teen’s original exorcism video has been shared on Twitter by user @Tim_Tweeted, who tweeted: ‘Anti-gay Christian mother exorcises the door molding of her daughter’s room.’

‘The first comment on their TT says: “There’s no hate like Christian love.” I’ve never heard that before but I totally agree,’ one person responded. ‘Hope they are able to get out of there soon and that woman gets some therapy.’

‘That poor child — Jesus was about love, not hate,’ someone else commented, while someone else called it ‘child abuse.’

Ewan McGregor won’t soon forget his fashion turn as Halston – Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Imagine, if you will, a galaxy far, far away where the one-name fashion wonder Halston dresses Obi-Wan Kenobi in something fabulous from the swinging ’70s.

Ewan McGregor can. Sort of.

McGregor is in the unique position of being the sole person — on this planet anyway — who might care, considering his dual roles as the Jedi master and the flamboyant designer, the latter the subject of a new Netflix miniseries and the former a Disney+ “Star Wars” installment that has the Scottish actor on set in Los Angeles.

“It would be much more comfortable,” he told The Associated Press during a recent interview on Zoom. “It would all be in cashmere, you know, none of that heavy blanket material stuff.”

Although “Halston” doesn’t drop until Friday, it has already generated some heat for McGregor and director Daniel Minahan, both among the series’ executive producers with Ryan Murphy.

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Halston’s niece, Lesley Frowick, along with other relatives, bashed Minahan’s passion project Monday as “frankly, garbage” and “inaccurate,” having seen nothing more than a trailer. Frowick, by phone from California, said the family and the Halston Archives were not consulted.

Minahan told AP he spoke to Halston’s brother, Robert Frowick, in the late ’90s while developing the project. Robert Frowick died in 2007 and his widow disputes her husband was consulted.

“I think everyone’s entitled to their opinion. This is not a documentary. It’s a dramatic series,” Minahan said. “And the people who knew Halston and were around him who have seen it have responded really well to it.”

In addition, award-winning “Pose” star Billy Porter, a fashion lover supreme, has questioned casting straight actors like McGregor in gay roles, noting gay actors rarely have equal access to straight parts.

“I felt that Ewan was the best person for the job,” said Minahan, who is gay. “I just can’t imagine anyone else doing it. He was my No. 1 choice.”

For his part, McGregor — rushing from interview to interview to promote the series while slinging his lightsaber once again — said word that Frowick and another of Halston’s six nieces were unhappy “makes me sad.”

“We were so meticulous,” he said. “Dan Minahan has been researching this, wanting to make this for more than 20 years, so it’s a shame.”

Halston was a Midwesterner who revolutionized his industry with comfortable deconstructed gowns, washable Ultraseude shirt dresses and a minimalist, clean approach that redefined American fashion starting in the 1960s. He was known for making Jackie Kennedy’s blue inaugural pillbox hat (he started as a milliner) and had a stable of beautiful muses and A-list friends, including Elizabeth Taylor, Liza Minnelli (played by Krysta Rodriguez), Babe Paley, Bianca Jagger and Andy Warhol.

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By the disco era, Halston was a regular at Studio 54, later designing costumes for the famed choreographer Martha Graham. His bright, sensual clothes, Minnelli has said, were clothes that danced with you.

Halston lost the use of his trademarked name in a business deal that made him rich but left him at the mercy of a series of corporate overseers. Born Roy Halston Frowick in Des Moines, Iowa, he died in 1990 of AIDS-related complications at age 57, having left behind his New York world after his ouster from the company that bore his name. He fell into the embrace of family in Northern California, where he died in a San Francisco hospital.

His decision to bring his aesthetic to the masses included making clothes for J.C. Penney and cranking out an onslaught of goods: luggage, carpet, uniforms for the Girl Scouts and Braniff Airways — and an unforgettable first scent that came in a tear drop bottle designed by another member of his inner circle, Elsa Peretti. She became a jewelry designer for Tiffany & Co. (thanks to an introduction by Halston) and was one of his bevy of models dubbed the Halstonettes.

The series is full of Halston snorting cocaine, Halston having sex with male hookers and call boys, and Halston spending lavishly. He had a penchant for decking out his mirrored Olympic Tower atelier in fresh orchids and flying in dinners from top New York restaurants to the retreat he rented from Warhol in Montauk.

The biopic, based on the 1991 book “Simply Halston” by Steven Gaines, also delves into his own reinvention, from poor boy in Indiana (his large family moved a lot) to elegant, black turtleneck-clad workaholic with a short fuse.

McGregor, as part of his preparation, learned to sew, whipping up botched baggy trousers with one pocket on the inside and one on the outside. He also had tea with Minnelli, though he promised to keep the details private.

“I just wanted her to know that he was in safe hands with me,” McGregor said. “You know, there’s lots been said about Halston over the years and I wanted her to know that I respected her love for him and I respected their friendship. I couldn’t imagine how deeply I felt her love for him until we had tea.”

Rodriguez, known for her work on stage and TV (she was Ana Vargas on NBC’s “Smash”), did her own singing in “Halston.” She didn’t meet Minnelli and admits to nerves taking on the living legend for Netflix.

Her resemblance to Minnelli, with her large round eyes, is uncanny.

“I definitely was nervous. I had to quit the voice that said what would Liza think or else I would never step foot on set,” she said. “I didn’t reach out to her. I thought her and Ewan had a really special moment and I wanted to keep that, what they created together.”

McGregor, 50, may be back with the Force, but he said he won’t soon forget Halston.

“I loved playing him so much,” he said. “I don’t think there will be any Halston in Obi-Wan but there will be a little bit in me. I think he saw beauty everywhere.”

___

Follow Leanne Italie on Twitter at http://twitter.com/litalie

How to stream ‘Pride’ – The Daily Dot

For centuries, to be a member of the LGBT community was more or less a death sentence. Things weren’t too much better even halfway through the 20th century. Pride, a six-part series dives deep into stories of struggle and survival that define a nation.

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Watch Pride on Hulu now

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Seven renowned directors tell stories about crucial LGBT history. The series begins in the 1950s, when anything deemed “queer” was under government scrutiny. The radical ’60s will show the spirit of rebellion that lead to Stonewall. From then, the movement’s vanguard goes heavy in the ’70s. Even through setbacks, like the AIDS epidemic, the movement is still going strong today.

The limited series will feature untold stories from unique perspectives and history makers. Each episode will cover a decade with plenty of first-hand accounts and archival footage.

Here’s everything you need to know to stream Pride.

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Where to watch Pride

The limited series will comprise of six episodes. The first three will air on May 14, 2021. The following three will air May 21.

  • Airtime: Friday, May 14
  • Channel: Hulu
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Status: Pending

Pride is available to stream on all services that have FX. The most popular option is Hulu, where you can watch the documentary for free when you sign up to try their ad-free service for 30 days.

You can stream FX on other live TV platforms. When trying to decide which one is best for you, you’ll want to weigh the cost, the other channels you’ll receive, and the compatible devices for streaming.

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*First Published: May 14, 2021, 6:00 pm CDT

Jaime Carrillo

Jaime Carillo is a writer for Pure Nintendo and a plucky YouTube cook. He specializes in writing about console gaming and kitchen gadgets. It comes naturally, considering he’s either wielding a massive cleaver or Switch Pro controller at any given point. When he’s not cruising through a drive-thru at 2am, he’s baking shokupan or whipping up a big pot of Japanese curry. He enjoys retro gaming, geopolitics, and Vic Berger videos.

Banning gay conversion therapy is a minefield | Comment – The Times

Young men were forced to sit through slideshows strapped with electrodes, receiving vicious shocks if they dwelled on images of men. Lesbians were “cured” of their urges via “corrective” rape. Aged 17, the US writer Andrew Solomon saw a female “sex surrogate” to learn heterosexual ways. Christians, Muslims, Sikhs and Jews have suffered disturbing exorcisms to “pray away the gay”.

Two things are widely agreed about conversion therapy. First, it doesn’t work. Sexuality is essentially hardwired: for centuries gay people have braved violence, family rejection, even death, to love the person they desire. Second, it is an abhorrent practice with no place in a civilised society. The Church of England, NHS and many professional counselling bodies have called for a ban.

Theresa May promised this

Miami gay bar threatened after conservative activist accuses it of having children in drag shows – Metro Weekly

drag, bar, threat, lgbtq, palace bar
A drag performer at Palace Bar – Photo: Palace Bar, via Facebook.

An LGBTQ bar in Miami has received threats and negative reviews on its social media pages after a conservative activist accused it of having children perform in drag shows.

In one Instagram post, a user wrote: “I hope y’all end up like Pulse,” referring to the massacre at a gay nightclub in Orlando on June 12, 2016 that killed 49 people and wounded 53. The FBI later deemed the shooting a terrorist attack.

In another instance, a Facebook user from Houston, Texas, gave the bar a zero-star review, writing: “Has children involved in their x-rated shows. Having money thrown at the children and telling them to pick it up! Unbelievable!!”

But Thomas Donall, the owner of the Palace, in South Beach, says that the threats and negative messages making false accusations against the bar on social media are untrue — the result of a misinformation campaign being spread by conservatives.

The incident that sparked the conservative outrage was a drag show where a performer was doing a routine dedicated to Madonna. Two young girls, whose parents had brought them to the bar, got permission to interact with the drag queens and began prancing and voguing on stage alongside a drag queen. The children, following the drag queen’s example, began picking up dollar bills from the floor that were dropped by customers as “tips” for the drag queen.

“It was all innocent fun for the girls,” Donall told Miami-based ABC affiliate WPLG. “I mean, they were posing with a Madonna show.”

However, Angela Stanton-King, a former Republican congressional candidate, conservative activist, and supporter of the QAnon conspiracy movement, claimed that she went to the Palace earlier this year and saw the children interacting with the drag queen.

“These people have children in a [expletive] drag show,” she said in a video she shot. She shared the video on Instagram with her nearly 300,000 followers, including footage of a confrontation she had with a Palace employee, during which she said: “I feel offended and disrespected by being a survivor of sexual abuse!”

See also: Virginia Republican says drag queens reading books to children is “child abuse”

Stanton-King has argued that city officials must take action to keep drag queen away from children, adding: “I’m anti-sexual exploitation of children.”



Such rhetoric isn’t new for Stanton-King, a Trump acolyte who was pardoned by the former president for her role in a car theft ring, who has previously spread misinformation on various topics on social media.

Stanton-King has been vocal about her anti-LGBTQ views, equating support for LGBTQ youth who come out as equivalent to pedophilia, railing against her transgender daughter, and even getting into a confrontation with her daughter during an appearance on the Dr. Phil show. She also threatened a transgender activist who appeared on the show — prompting Twitter to suspend her account.

But Donall worries that Stanton-King’s misinformation campaign is going too far, and hurting his business, which was already negatively impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene recently repeated Stanton-King’s claims when she called for the drag queen who interacted with the children at the club (while, in typical fashion for Greene, misstating the club’s location, as well as repeating other erroneous information). This has prompted some conspiracy theorists to complain to Miami Beach City Hall, urging politicians to step in and stop the drag shows.

Donall claims one city official even asked him to change the drag queens’ artistic expression. 

A spokeswoman for the city told WPLG she wasn’t aware the city had taken any action against the bar. But Donall says the attacks are taking a toll on his staff.

“It’s really difficult for us and heart-wrenching … I mean it just makes me … really sick to my stomach,” he said.

Read more:

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Baltimore police say officers were forced to shoot at suspect – 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.