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Elias: Dignity Health link to UC Health opens up Pandora’s Box of religious issues – Record Searchlight

Mercy Medical Center is one of Dignity Health's North State hospitals.

Thomas Elias

On some levels, it’s sensible for the University of California’s health system, including famed hospitals like UCLA, UC San Francisco and UC San Diego, to link with the Dignity Health group of hospitals and clinics often located in much more isolated and rural locations.

While UC hospitals generally operate in major cities and urban counties, Dignity’s 67 California hospitals and urgent care centers serve both urban and suburban locales including San Jose and Glendale. They also span places as disparate as Mt. Shasta, Santa Cruz and the Inland Empire.

Dignity’s current two-year-old arrangement with UC Health can provide care much closer to home for some patients affiliated with the state-owned hospitals.

The deal also lets Dignity patients access care and consultations with the many world-renowned specialists working at UC’s teaching hospitals. The two systems are also the state’s No. 1 and No. 2 providers of Medi-Cal services for low-income patients.

But there are some limits, mostly imposed by Dignity, owned and operated by an arm of the Roman Catholic Church. Like all Catholic hospitals and clinics, Dignity obeys the dictates of the church’s national conference of bishops.

This means its hospitals observe dictates of the church’s Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services. Translation: No abortions, unless doctors determine a patient will die without one. It also means a lot less service for gay, lesbian and transgender persons. Hormone treatments for the transgendered cannot happen in a Dignity hospital. The same with surgeries for the transgendered.

This is starting to bother some California officials a lot, so pressure is building to end the affiliation, and that pressure appears justified.

“I could not in good conscience agree to a policy that allows us to continue affiliations with private healthcare operators that limit the delivery of medicine in any way that’s not based on …the best practice of medicine,” UC Board of Regents chairman John Perez told a reporter. Perez, once the first openly gay speaker of the state Assembly, has UC actively considering the future shape of its connections to Dignity and other religiously affiliated medical systems.

Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener of San Francisco goes further, sponsoring a bill to limit UC’s ability to make deals with hospitals or clinics that put “nonclinical” limits on services they offer. Many Wiener bills on subjects like housing and drug use are perennial failures in the Legislature, but manage to move the state’s agenda even if they die. This one has a solid chance at passage.

As it should. For while Dignity brags on its website that the UC partnership gives “thousands of medical students and residents statewide access to comprehensive clinical training,” that also could mean subtle indoctrination of those same future physicians against giving treatments that many women and others consider essential.

Yes, Dignity’s hospitals and centers sometimes offer more services than UC for children with traumatic injuries and better inpatient psychiatric care for adolescents, but at what cost?

For if UC hospitals can in any way have care they provide influenced by authorities of one religion, who’s to say they won’t someday move toward other religious preferences — like, for instance, Muslim Sharia law? This is a Pandora’s box UC would be wise to slam shut while the arrangement is still young and not solidly ingrained in its habits.

Said one UC spokesman, “Our goal in establishing relationships with other health care organizations is to extend the reach of the university’s high-quality care and expertise.”

That noble idea could also be accomplished if UC set up new clinics in less urban locations than where its hospitals exist. It’s also possible to link up with non-sectarian clinics and urgent care centers, even if no other chain has as many locations and patients as Dignity.

The bottom line: The deal with Dignity brings too many pitfalls for it to be good for UC’s health system or for many of its patients. Let’s end it sooner rather than later.

Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. 

Senator speaks of ‘praying for years’ not to be gay due to shame – The Irish Times

One of the youngest Senators in the Seanad has spoken of how he prayed for years not to be gay because of shame, as he expressed his opposition to a new sex-education programme for Catholic primary schools.

Sinn Féin Senator Fintan Warfield said there was “a lot to unpack in the news that the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference has developed what it refers to as a voluntary resource for primary schools”.

“I do not profess to have all of the answers but this is not it”, Mr Warfield said of the relationships and sexuality education programme, which has been developed for junior infants to sixth class.

The Sinn Féin spokesman on LGBT rights pointed to an Irish Times report about the programme.

About 90 per cent of all national schools are Catholic and Mr Warfield quoted the introduction to the programme, which states that when discussing LGBT issues the “Church’s teaching in relation to marriage between a man and a woman cannot be omitted”.

The programme also states that “puberty is a gift from God. We are perfectly designed by God to procreate with him”.

A lesson on safety and protection “advises senior infant children to say the ‘Angel of God’ prayer”.

Mr Warfield said “I prayed for years that I would not be gay. I did so because of shame, much of which I can place blame for at the door of the Church.

“Prayer and religious ideology do nothing to protect children or young people. Prayer and ideology do nothing to protect kids against sexually transmitted infections or HIV.”

Mr Warfield said a debate was needed on sex education as he called for politicians in the Dáil and Seanad “to stand up and be allies on this issue”.

He said: “I know that by making this statement alone, there will be abuse and I will be called a degenerate online. We need allies to stand up with LGBT people.”

Seanad leader Regina Doherty told Mr Warfield she was “absolutely distraught listening to you… talk about the years that you prayed and the years that you felt ashamed, because it makes me feel ashamed that we had a society that allowed you feel that way”.

The former Fine Gael minister said she had religious beliefs “but they play no part in the conversations that I ever had with any of my four children around sexual education. They’ve got nothing to do with it.”

Green Party Senator Pauline O’Reilly, also speaking on the issue, said there was a need to ensure that there is no confusion on the issue. “We must be really clear in sex education that ours is a country that has moved to a different place, where we accept everyone and do not talk about religion and God in the same sentence in which we talk about relationships and sex, because it can be very confusing.”

She pointed out that at the weekend the Citizens’ Assembly recommended the recognition of all family types and not only those based on a man and a woman.

“It is therefore important that the our education system does the same when it comes to education on relationships and sex”.

Ms O’Reilly also said that “young people need to be fully prepared for real life, and to have their own families reflected in the school system.”

Jillienne T. Blakeslee | News, Sports, Jobs – Gloversville Leader-Herald

Jillienne T. Blakeslee, age 42, of Gloversville, passed away suddenly after briefly battling the Coronavirus on Thursday, April 22, 2021, at Nathan Littauer Hospital, Gloversville.

She was born December 22, 1978, in Amsterdam, the daughter of Ellen Yost Blakeslee and the late Brian Gay Blakeslee. Jillienne was a sweetheart and had a heart of gold. She loved anything with pumpkin flavor and sprinkles along with reading and wrestling. Jillienne grew up in Gloversville and graduated from Gloversville High School. She lived most of her adult life in Covington, Georgia and had recently moved back to her hometown.

Jillienne leaves behind her three loving children, Austin Michael Pitt Butterbaugh (Georgia), Ceirra L. Glasgow Boswell and Georgia Elizabeth Boswell (Georgia); her mother, Ellen M. Blakeslee of Covington, Georgia; her brother, Kristopher Brian Blakeslee (Frances) of CampVerde, Arizona; her sister, Jocelyn Glasgow Miller (Craig) of Hertford, North Carolina; nephew, Hunner J. Dawley, Georgia; and niece, Abigail Dawley, Georgia along with loving aunts and uncles and cousins.

In addition to her father, Brian; Jillienne was predeceased by paternal grandparents, Albert Gay Blakeslee and Eleanor Schulyer Blakeslee; and maternal grandparents, Mary Ellen Managun Yost and Robert Ernest Yost.

Keeping with her wishes, there will be no formal calling hours or funeral services. Cremation took place at Park View Cemetery, Schenectady.

Interment will be in the Thompson/Glasgow family plot at Prospect Hill Cemetery, Gloversville.

Memorial contributions may be made in lieu of flowers to the charity of your choice in Jillienne’s name.

Arrangements are entrusted to Walrath & Stewart Funeral Home, Gloversville.

Online condolences may be made at www.brbsfuneral.com.

Newt Gingrich whines Biden is ‘attacking’ homophobes ‘appalled by gay flags at embassies’ – Yahoo Eurosport UK

Right-wing politician-turned pundit Newt Gingrich has claimed Joe Biden is “attacking” homophobes who are “appalled by gay flags flying at embassies”.

On Fox News’ Justice with Judge Jeanine Saturday (24 April), conservative host Jeanine Pirro asked the former speaker of the House for his take on the Biden administration more than 100 days in.

The Republican, who once urged on queer people to be more, er “tolerant” of homophobes, showed how tolerant he is by raging about a piece of fabric for nearly two minutes.

The 77-year-old took aim at secretary of state Antony Blinken moving to allow US embassies and consulates across the world to fly the LGBT+ Pride flag on the same pole as the American flag.

“If you listed every idiotic thing that the Biden administration has done in the first 100 days, you’d begin to realise whether it’s threatening everybody who believes in the Second Amendment, or it’s attacking everybody who believes in right to life, or it is attacking people of traditional values who are appalled that this administration would fly the gay flag at American embassies all over the world,” he said.

“You just go down item by item and it’s almost like they have a checklist of what can we do that will really truly infuriate traditional Americans.”

Gingrich continued: “Look, I think that the left has decided they’re going to try to push all the regular Americans into a corner where they either have to fight, in which case they’ll be attacked by the news media, or they have to just cave and hide.

He added: “I have never seen anything like it and somebody asked me this afternoon, I told them I couldn’t imagine any administration which has been this deliberately anti-American and this deliberately committed to infuriating the majority of American people.

“Literally, in over 200 years of history, I can’t think of a single administration that has been this radical and this hostile.”

Newt Gingrich says most Americans are anti-LGBT+ rights. They’re not

Yes, he really said this with his whole chest just months after Donald Trump’s turbulent tenure as president came to an end.

Speaking of Trump, Blinken binned a Trump-era ban that saw the senior State Department leadership reject requests from embassies to raise rainbow flags during Pride Month in a directive issued Friday (23 April).

The action authorised envoys to hoist LGBT+ Pride flags before 17 May, which is the International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia.

But despite how just seven per cent of Americans are “completely against” LGBT+ rights, according to a Public Religion Research Institute study, Gingrich sought to say that “regular Americans” are being “threatened” by such displays.

Even among seniors, Southerners and members of most religious groups, support for LGBT+ rights, especially non-discrimination laws, in the US has soared between 2015 and 2019, the institute found in a separate study.

“The broad support for laws to protect LGBT people from discrimination represents a rarity in our polarized politics today — an issue that actually brings Americans together across partisan, religious, and geographic lines,” said the institute’s CEO, Robert Jones.

U.S. Supreme Court spurns case over California LGBT rights-related policy – Reuters

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday turned away a challenge by Republican-governed Texas to a law enacted by Democratic-led California that bars state-funded travel to states deemed to be hostile to the rights of LGBT people.

The 2016 measure was enacted in the most populous U.S. state in response to laws in conservative states that allowed certain businesses to refuse service to LGBT customers. Those laws cited the need to protect religious liberty.

Two conservative justices, Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, said they would have heard the case.

Texas sued after California in 2017 added it to its list, now numbering 12, of states covered by the ban.

Texas was placed on the list after its Republican-controlled legislature passed a measure that allowed child welfare providers to deny service based on their religious beliefs – a move California said would allow groups to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.

Texas said in its lawsuit, which was filed directly at the Supreme Court as is allowed in some disputes between states, that California’s law violated the U.S. Constitution’s so-called commerce clause by discriminating against interstate commerce. West Virginia, Kansas and Tennessee were among 19 states that filed a brief backing Texas.

Former President Donald Trump’s administration had urged the court to take up the case, saying the California law “transgresses constitutional principles that are designed to bind the states together in a single union.”

In a case also filed directly at the Supreme Court in December, Texas asked the justices to toss out President-elect Joe Biden’s election victories over Trump in four key states. The court also rejected that request. read more

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Will Young says lockdown has been ‘amazing for someone with anxiety’ – Yahoo Canada Shine On

Eat This, Not That!

Dr. Fauci Clarifies if You’ll Need Vaccine Booster

You’ve got your COVID-19 vaccine, or are about to—but how long will that protection last? Will you need a booster shot? Or have to go back every year, like you do for flu shots? Dr. Anthony Fauci, the chief medical advisor to the President and the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, spoke about this with CNN’s Jim Acosta. The two also discussed when you could take your mask off this summer, among other subjects. Read on for 5 key takeaways that might save your life—and to ensure your health and the health of others, don’t miss these Sure Signs Your Illness is Actually Coronavirus in Disguise. 1 Dr. Fauci Offered Clarification About Vaccine Boosters Dr. Fauci was asked when we’d all need another shot, in addition to the ones we’ve already gotten. “So one of the things that I’ve noticed, there’s been some confusion about, that I like to clarify, that when you talk about the need of a third shot in the two shot regimen, you’re not talking about efficacy because right now, I mean, right away, 14 days after your second dose, you have a very, very effective vaccine and you are highly, highly protected,” said Dr. Fauci. As for when you might need a booster? “You know, Jim, we don’t know,” said Dr. Fauci. “I mean, likely it’ll be a shot and it might be one that you’ll need periodically—similar to what we do with influenza. We don’t know that, but you want to be prepared for it. And that’s exactly what we’re doing. We’re staying prepared unless the durability starts to go down. We want to be prepared to keep it up at a level that’s highly protective.” 2 Dr. Fauci Said You’ll Soon Hear About Going Outside Without a Mask The CDC is expected to announce tomorrow new guidance for when you need and don’t need a mask outside. “The one thing for sure is that thing that’s on a lot of people’s minds is what about outdoors?” said Dr. Fauci. “Cause obviously a lot of people are going to be spending a lot of time more outdoors now because the weather is getting really nice—beautiful spring weather. You’re going to be seeing people wanting to do things outdoors without masks. And it’s common sense to know that the risk when you are outdoors, which we have been saying all along, is extremely low. And if you are vaccinated, it’s even lower. So you’re going to be hearing about those kinds of recommendations soon.” 3 Dr. Fauci Said He Wishes Everyone Would Show Up for Their Second Shot “We’ve learned this morning from the CDC that about 8% of Americans have missed their second dose back in March. That number was just over 3%. I know you’re a numbers guy. I know you’re a data guy. What are the implications of that?” asked Acosta.Dr. Fauci said it was natural that some people would forget, or otherwise not be able to get their second dose. “I’d like it to be a 0%,” he said, “but I’m not surprised that there are some people who do that. In fact, when you have other vaccines, such as the herpes zoster vaccine, that’s the kind of thing that the percentage of people who don’t show up for the second dose is even more than that. So that’s not something that’s specific to the” COVID vaccine, he said. 4 Dr. Fauci Said He Hopes the J&J Pause Fosters a Sense of Security, Not Doubt Dr. Fauci was asked about the pause—and then restart—of the distribution of the Johnson&Johnson vaccine, which has been linked to 13 cases of blood clots among women. “One of the things that I think people aren’t fully appreciating,” said Dr. Fauci, “is that when you talk to people, many of them realize that the very fact that the CDC and the FDA caused this temporary pause really is a reflection of how seriously we take safety. So as opposed to being something that is going against people getting vaccines, I think they’re going to realize if you ask somebody why they’re hesitant, there are a number of reasons. One of them that’s a predominant reason is that people might be concerned about safety.” And he hopes the CDC taking precautions makes you feel they are safe.RELATED: Most COVID Patients Did This Before Getting Sick 5 Dr. Fauci Says Here’s What We Need to Get Back to Normal “Scientists believe 70 to 85% of the population must be fully vaccinated,” said Acosta, “so we can return to pre pandemic life as we knew it….Do you think we’re going to hit that target number that we’re looking for?””We are estimating—because we don’t know—we’re estimating that that’s about 70 to 85%. However, even before you get to that, as you get more and more people vaccinated, you will reach a point even before them, where you’ll start to see the number of cases going down dramatically—not necessarily complete total protection, but the number of cases going down dramatically. Right now, we’re averaging about 60,000 cases per day. On a seven day average, as we get lower and lower and lower, you’re going to be seeing a gradual diminution of the restrictions and a more progressive moving towards normality. It’s not going to be like a light switch on and off we go from where we are right now to completely normal. It’s going to be a gradual getting with regards to what you can do—outdoors, which you can do travel, outdoor sports, stadiums, theaters, restaurants, little by little. You’ll be seeing that approach to normal.” 6 How to Get to “Normal” Faster So follow Fauci’s fundamentals and help end this pandemic, no matter where you live—wear a face mask that fits snugly and is double layered, don’t travel, social distance, avoid large crowds, don’t go indoors with people you’re not sheltering with (especially in bars), practice good hand hygiene, get vaccinated when it becomes available to you, and to protect your life and the lives of others, don’t visit any of these 35 Places You’re Most Likely to Catch COVID.

Gay Black man shot repeatedly by cop who ‘thought his phone was a gun’ after calling 911 for help – Yahoo Movies UK

A gay Black man is in intensive care after being shot ten times by a police officer who’d given him a ride home less than an hour earlier.

Isaiah Brown, 32, was driven home by a Virginia sheriff’s deputy on Wednesday (21 April) after his car broke down. The same officer returned to the address about 45 minutes later following reports of a “domestic incident” between Brown and his brother.

When he arrived Brown, who was unarmed, was on the phone to a 911 dispatcher. “He’s got a gun to his head,” the deputy can be heard saying in body-camera footage released Friday (23 April), apparently mistaking the phone for a gun.

“Drop the gun now and stop walking towards me,” he screamed. “Stop walking towards me. Stop. Stop.”

At this point a series of gunshots ring out on the video; by the time Brown first appears on camera, he had already been shot multiple times.

The deputy continued telling Brown to drop the ‘gun’ and show his hands before providing him with medical aid. A spokesperson for the Virginia State Police confirmed to CNN that the victim was unarmed at the time of the shooting.

“The officer mistook a cordless house phone for a gun,” Brown’s lawyer, David Haynes, said in a statement.

“There is no indication that Isaiah did anything other than comply with dispatch’s orders and raised his hands with the phone in his hand as instructed. The deputy in question made multiple, basic policing errors and violated established protocols. The deputy was situated nearly 50 feet from Isaiah, was never threatened and should not have discharged his weapon.”

Isaiah Brown is now on a breathing machine and is being treated for serious but non-life-threatening injuries. The police deputy, who has not been named, has been placed on administrative leave according to the sheriff’s office policy.

In the recording of the 911 call, Brown can be heard arguing with his brother about getting keys to a car parked outside of the house. While on the phone he asks his brother for a gun, which his brother refused to give him. He then asks the dispatcher to send someone to the house and says: “I’m about to kill my brother.”

However, Haynes said Brown added that he was unarmed and had “clearly told dispatch that he did not have a weapon” before the deputy arrived.

Brown’s family is asking for the release of the dispatch audio with the deputy prior to the shooting to help explain the “failure of communication between dispatch and the officer which led to this tragic event”.

“Isaiah is now fighting for his life as a result of these completely avoidable errors by the deputy and dispatch,” Haynes said.

Virginia State Police said it is investigating the shooting.

Gay Black man shot repeatedly by cop who ‘thought his phone was a gun’ after calling 911 for help – Yahoo Eurosport UK

A gay Black man is in intensive care after being shot ten times by a police officer who’d given him a ride home less than an hour earlier.

Isaiah Brown, 32, was driven home by a Virginia sheriff’s deputy on Wednesday (21 April) after his car broke down. The same officer returned to the address about 45 minutes later following reports of a “domestic incident” between Brown and his brother.

When he arrived Brown, who was unarmed, was on the phone to a 911 dispatcher. “He’s got a gun to his head,” the deputy can be heard saying in body-camera footage released Friday (23 April), apparently mistaking the phone for a gun.

“Drop the gun now and stop walking towards me,” he screamed. “Stop walking towards me. Stop. Stop.”

At this point a series of gunshots ring out on the video; by the time Brown first appears on camera, he had already been shot multiple times.

The deputy continued telling Brown to drop the ‘gun’ and show his hands before providing him with medical aid. A spokesperson for the Virginia State Police confirmed to CNN that the victim was unarmed at the time of the shooting.

“The officer mistook a cordless house phone for a gun,” Brown’s lawyer, David Haynes, said in a statement.

“There is no indication that Isaiah did anything other than comply with dispatch’s orders and raised his hands with the phone in his hand as instructed. The deputy in question made multiple, basic policing errors and violated established protocols. The deputy was situated nearly 50 feet from Isaiah, was never threatened and should not have discharged his weapon.”

Isaiah Brown is now on a breathing machine and is being treated for serious but non-life-threatening injuries. The police deputy, who has not been named, has been placed on administrative leave according to the sheriff’s office policy.

In the recording of the 911 call, Brown can be heard arguing with his brother about getting keys to a car parked outside of the house. While on the phone he asks his brother for a gun, which his brother refused to give him. He then asks the dispatcher to send someone to the house and says: “I’m about to kill my brother.”

However, Haynes said Brown added that he was unarmed and had “clearly told dispatch that he did not have a weapon” before the deputy arrived.

Brown’s family is asking for the release of the dispatch audio with the deputy prior to the shooting to help explain the “failure of communication between dispatch and the officer which led to this tragic event”.

“Isaiah is now fighting for his life as a result of these completely avoidable errors by the deputy and dispatch,” Haynes said.

Virginia State Police said it is investigating the shooting.

Up Next William & Mary names academic building after gay historian – Washington Blade

Three transgender people allege they suffered abuse at a Miami jail last year after police arrested them during Black Lives Matter protests.

The Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund in a letter it sent to Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava on Wednesday notes Christian Pallidine, a college student who identifies as a trans man, was attending a Black Lives Matter protest in downtown Miami on May 31, 2020, when Miami-Dade police officers arrested him and charged him with violating a county-wide curfew.

Pallidine arrived at the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center a short time later, and the letter notes personnel abused him because of his gender identity.

“The staff at TGK subjected Mr. Pallidine to degrading and outrageous treatment because he is transgender,” it reads. “TGK staff forced him to strip and display his genitals in front of a group of officers — part of a series of invasive, pseudo-medical, sexualized procedures conducted on him for no legitimate purpose. TGK staff also belittled Mr. Pallidine, publicized his transgender status to others, asked gratuitous questions about his anatomy, and called him derogatory names.”

The letter, among other things, notes Pallidine underwent an examination that “focused solely on his transgender status” and it “took place in a public area where others could easily see and hear him and the person questioning him.” The letter says the officer who conducted the exam asked him “multiple questions about his genitals and plans for future medical care, such as, ‘Do you want a penis in the future?’”

Pallidine alleges he was forced to take a pregnancy test “because of his genitals” and officers mocked him because of his gender identity. Pallidine also says officers forced him to undergo a strip search and placed him in solidary confinement before his release.

Jae Bucci and Gabriela Amaya Cruz on July 19, 2020, attended a rally and march for Black trans women in downtown Miami. Miami-Dade police officers brought them to the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center after they arrested them.

Bucci, who is a teacher and makeup artist, on Wednesday during a virtual press conference that TLDEF, the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Harvard LGBTQ+ Advocacy Clinic organized, said the gender marker on her ID is female and the Miami-Dade Police Department processed her as such. Bucci noted Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center personnel also processed her as female, but she said an officer told her, “Aha, I knew it. That’s what I was looking for” after she disclosed her gender identity.

Bucci said her friends were not able to find her because officers had reclassified her as male. Bucci told reporters that officers placed her with male prisoners and, like Pallidine, forced her to undergo an “illegal strip search in front of several officers.”

“They tugged at my piercings, drawing blood, and forcibly tried to remove my hair, assuming it to be a wig,” said Bucci.

“They forced me to sit with men … I was put in danger,” she added. “I needed protection. I asked to be seated with other women, but the guards were only hyper-focused on my genitals, repeatedly calling me a man.”

Bucci said she was later placed in solitary confinement “for hours with no contact, food, water, leading to a panic attack where I began to self-harm and contemplate suicide.” Bucci said officers also forced her to wear men’s clothing “with my breasts clearly visible.”

Jae Bucci (Photo by Emely Virta)

Amaya Cruz — a barista, artist and activist — said she suffered many of the same abuses that Bucci and Pallidine described once she arrived at the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center.

Amaya Cruz told reporters the officers did not know whether to place her with female or male inmates once she disclosed her gender identity to them.

She said officers forced her to remove her wig before they took her mugshot.

Amaya Cruz said she objected to male officers patting her down, and they told a female colleague that “he’s saying he’s a woman, but he’s a man. He has a dick still.”

Amaya Cruz said the female officer did her pat down and allowed her to fill out paperwork in which she disclosed her gender identity. Amaya Cruz said the officer allowed her to sit with other female inmates.

Amaya Cruz was born with ectrodactyly, a rare genetic disorder that limits finger movement, but she was subject to “excessive force” during the pat down and when guards took her fingerprints.

Amaya Cruz said the female officer who did her pat-down told her to change into a pair of basketball shorts and a white t-shirt before her release.

“I was so uncomfortable and I just complied because my only reaction was I don’t want to be here any longer,” said Amaya Cruz. “At that point I felt uncomfortable, humiliated, my gender was being yelled out the entire night. My gender identity was not being taken seriously in any way.”

Gabriela Amaya Cruz (Photo by Sonya Revell/Southern Poverty Law Center)

TLDEF Staff Attorney Alejandra Caraballo told reporters the “health and safety of our clients were jeopardized by the willful and wanton treatment by the officers at TGK.”

“The current policies followed at TGK are woefully inadequate and are discriminatory on their face, which will inevitably lead towards the targeted harassment of trans people in custody,” added Caraballo.

Harvard LGBTQ+ Advocacy Clinic Founding Director Alexander Chen also took part in the press conference alongside Arianna Lint, chief executive officer of Arianna’s Center, an organization that serves trans women in South Florida. Tatiana Williams, co-founder and executive director of Transinclusive Group, which also works with trans people in South Florida, also participated.

“The change has to happen, as we all mentioned, structurally,” said Williams. “It has to happen at the top.”

Two men hold their fists in their air during an anti-police brutality protest in downtown Miami on June 1, 2020. (Washington Blade photo by Michael K. Lavers)

The letter to Levine Cava calls for her office to “reach a resolution” with Pallidine, Bucci and Amaya Cruz without litigation that specifically addresses several points:

1) “Policy and procedure updates to address the issues faced by our clients and other transgender community members.”

2) “Meaningful accountability measures for MDCR (Miami-Dade Corrections and Rehabilitation Department) staff that go well beyond what Internal Affairs currently provides.”

3) “Appropriate discipline for the MDCR staff involved in the inappropriate treatment of our clients.”

4) “Updates to county records concerning our clients and their gender.”

5) “Compensation to our clients as allowed by law; and reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs as allowed by law.”

“We have achieved similar results working with officials elsewhere in the country, and are confident we can do the same here,” reads the letter.

Chen echoed this point during the press conference.

“We have every expectation that we will be able to come to an accord with the county that will both do justice to our plaintiffs and protect transgender people in the county going forward,” he said.

Lint, like Chen, noted Levine Cava championed LGBTQ rights when she was a member of the Miami-Dade County Commission until she succeeded now-Congressman Carlos Giménez last November.

“I am calling on Mayor Levine Cava to continue this support for the transgender community by taking steps to address the mistreatment of transgender individuals in Miami-Dade County jails,” said Lint. “Arianna’s Center is committed to working with Mayor Levine Cava to eradicate prejudice against the transgender community in our prisons, jails, detention centers and through the whole criminal justice system.”

Levine Cava’s office has not returned the Washington Blade’s request for comment.

William & Mary names academic building after gay historian – Washington Blade

Boswell, gay news, Washington Blade

Three William & Mary campus structures will be renamed in honor of (left to right) John E. Boswell ’69, Arthur A. Matsu ’27 and Hulon L. Willis Sr. M.Ed. ’56. (Photo courtesy William & Mary)

The College of William & Mary, which was founded in 1693 in colonial Williamsburg, Va., announced on April 23 that it has renamed one of its major academic buildings after the late gay historian John E. Boswell.

Boswell, a 1969 College of William & Mary graduate, received his doctorate degree at Harvard University and began his teaching career at Yale University before writing his highly acclaimed 1980 book, “Christianity, Social Tolerance and Homosexuality: Gay People in Western Europe from the Beginning of the Christian Era to the 14th Century.”

Using his skills as a linguist who spoke or read 17 languages, including Latin, Ancient Greek, and Old Church Slavonic, Boswell uncovered and translated documents that he argues in his book show that the Roman Catholic Church had not condemned gay people throughout its history and at times either was indifferent to homosexuality or celebrated same-sex romantic relationships.

The book, which won a National Book Award and the Stonewall Book Award in 1981, drew international attention and created a stir in both the academic world and the Catholic Church establishment.

Boswell wrote five other books, including the 1994 book, “Same-Sex Unions in Pre-Modern Europe,” before he died that same year of complications associated with AIDS at the age of 47.

LGBTQ activists have credited Boswell with helping to advance the LGBTQ rights movement and efforts to legalize same-sex marriage through his writings and academic research.

“It brings honor to our 328-year-old institution that we name an academic building for an alumnus who used his William & Mary education to improve the lives of millions of Americans,” said Jeff Trammell, the former William & Mary rector who became the first openly gay chair of the governing body of a major U.S. public university.

“John Boswell’s scholarship inspired the recognition of same-sex relationships here and around the world,” Trammell said in a statement. “And personally, it helped make it possible for William & Mary Chancellor Sandra Day O’Connor to marry my husband and me in the U.S. Supreme Court.”

Evan Wolfson, a civil rights attorney and founder and president of the LGBTQ advocacy group Freedom to Marry, said Boswell’s 1980 book had a profound influence on his life and career beginning in his days as a law school student. Among other things, Wolfson said the book inspired him to write his 1983 law school thesis on wining marriage equality for gay people.

“Beyond the evidence that gay love had not always been oppressed or stigmatized, what John E. Boswell’s history taught me was that if things had once been different, we could make them different again,” said Wolfson, who noted that he and

Boswell became friends and Boswell’s work continued to help him in his own legal work on behalf of same-sex marriage rights.

In its statement announcing the building renamed in honor of Boswell, the College of William & Mary announced it has also renamed a campus arcade structure near its sports stadium after Arthur A. Matsu, the college’s first known Asian-American student and football star. The statement says another building was named after Hulon L. Willis Sr., the first African-American student to enroll at William & Mary.

“We move forward as a community, as a university, with our renewed commitment to recognizing individuals who have made lasting, pathbreaking contributions to William & Mary,” said John E. Littel, the college’s current rector, who called Boswell, Matsu, and Willis “trailblazers.”

Trammell said the renaming was part of a process of reexamining names of buildings that in years past had been named after Civil War-era figures of the Confederacy as well as segregationists in later years.

Jim Wells claims DUP pressure over gay conversion therapy vote amid party ‘mass rebellion’ – Belfast Telegraph

MLA Jim Wells has claimed the DUP put pressure him not to force a public vote on gay conversion therapy and there was a “mass rebellion” among its Assembly members on the issue.

r Wells, who has had the DUP whip removed but remains a party member, made the comments on the BBC Stephen Nolan programme.

Last week the Assembly passed a UUP motion calling on the communities minister to ban gay conversion therapy in Northern Ireland.

A defeated DUP amendment had supported banning the practice, but sought protections for “legitimate religious activities such as preaching, prayer and pastoral support” with the argument they did not amount to conversion therapy.

The amendment also faced criticism from political rivals for removing the line from the original motion stating that it was wrong to view the LGBTQ community as requiring a “fix or cure”.

Mr Wells claimed the DUP leadership had wanted all its MLAs to abstain on the motion.

He said there was “a mass rebellion” at a DUP Assembly group meeting where the bulk of the membership (23 members) made it clear there was no way they would abstain.

Mr Wells said the party had then hoped the motion would slip through without a vote, and that the five party members intending to abstain would not be recorded, including party leader Arlene Foster. 

After texting all DUP MLAs to let them know he would be pressing the issue, Mr Wells said he was politely asked by a leading DUP member to “drop it”.

“I made it absolutely clear to him that ‘no, I was pushing it to a vote’,” he said.

“And I can see why he asked for that, because that showed that the party leader and shockingly (Economy Minister) Diane Dodds…that is the real shock here … had decided to abstain on the vote.”

It has been reported DUP leader Arlene Foster is attempting to soften the party’s stance on the issue.

Mr Wells said it was clear that Mrs Foster and Mrs Dodds were trying to push the party in a direction it didn’t want to go.

He said the potential outcome would have been to put religious leaders in prison after praying for someone struggling with same-sex attraction.

A DUP spokesman said: “We support a ban on conversion therapy but the original motion took no consideration of religious freedom. We could not support the motion after our amendment was defeated. It was a matter for members whether they abstained or voted against. There was no whip applied.

“We will not support, indeed we will veto, any legislation which does not contain robust protections for churches. The party leader met with representatives of the faith sector on Wednesday. We will work constructively with all parties to ensure that harmful practices are banned but religious freedom is not curtailed,” he said.

Supreme court dodges dispute between Texas, California over religious freedom, gay rights – USA TODAY

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WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court declined Monday to take up a heated dispute between one of the nation’s most liberal states and one of its most conservative in a case that had pit freedom of religion against gay rights.

The decision to turn down the case drew a dissent from two of the court’s conservatives, Associate Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas.  

California passed a law in 2016 prohibiting taxpayer-funded travel – such as for state employees to attend conferences – to any state that doesn’t ban discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. Texas law allows foster-care and adoption agencies to deny same-sex couples on religious grounds.

Texas took California directly to the Supreme Court last year, asserting the travel ban was “born of religious animus” and that it violates the Constitution.

The justices had been considering whether to take the suit for months. The court did not explain its decision not to hear the case. 

More:Supreme Court hears Philadelphia foster parent dispute pitting religious freedom against LGBTQ rights

“If this cycle of retaliation continues, it will leave a country divided into red and blue states: The former spend money only in other red states; the latter spend money only in the blue ones,” Texas told the court last year.

Because the lawsuit started at the Supreme Court, Alito questioned the court’s decision in a dissent.

“It will not even permit the filing of Texas’s bill of complaint,” Alito wrote of the suit. “This understanding of our exclusive original jurisdiction should be reexamined.”

The potential conflict between gay rights and religious freedom has become a central theme at the nation’s highest court, which now has an ostensible 6-3 conservative majority. One of the highest-profile cases this year involves a Catholic foster-care agency in Philadelphia that has declined to screen same-sex couples based on its religious objection to gay marriage.

A view of the Supreme Court in Washington, Thursday, April 22, 2021. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) ORG XMIT: DCSW119

California asserts that it is striking that balance as it sees best for its residents.

“The fact that California has balanced these sometimes competing concerns differently from Texas does not demonstrate that California acted irrationally or with animus toward religion,” the state told the court.

The Simpsons recasts gay Cuban character with gay voice actor – Metro Weekly

Waylon Smithers, Julio, Tony Rodriguez, The Simpsons, gay
Waylon Smithers and Julio in The Simpsons — Photo: Fox

Long-running animated sitcom The Simpsons has recast gay Cuban character Julio, replacing white heterosexual voice actor Hank Azaria with gay Cuban-American actor Tony Rodriguez.

Julio first appeared in the 14th season of The Simpsons and has since featured in 30 episodes, with a variety of roles including Marge’s hairdresser and a love interest for Waylon Smithers — who came out as gay in 2016.

Rodriguez made his first appearance as Julio’s voice actor in the March 2021 episode “Uncut Femmes.”

Before Rodriguez took over the role, Julio was briefly voiced by actor and singer Mario Jose in the February 2021 episode “Dairy Queen,” ComicBook.com reports.

Julio’s recasting comes after a recent lengthy supercut video, “Every LGBT Joke On The Simpsons Ever,” created by Drew Mackie and Glen Lakin of the Gayest Episode Ever podcast.

Matt Selman, an executive producer on The Simpsons, acknowledged the impact the video had behind the scenes of the show.

He responded to the Gayest Episode Ever Twitter account, which celebrated Rodriguez’s first appearance as Julio, noting, “The every gay joke ever on the Simpsons video definitely had a hand in this magic coming together.”

Rodriguez appeared on Gayest Episode Ever to explain explain the role the video played in his casting.

“Matt Selman had seen the supercut, heard the podcast and heard you say my name,” he said. “By that point, my video was out, and he asked the other writers of the show: ‘Does anyone know who Tony Rodriguez is?’”



He added: “We didn’t know they were actively looking to recast, and we didn’t know they had been looking for weeks. Thank god you put [the supercut] out there when you did!”

Ahead of his first episode’s airing, Rodriguez celebrated his casting on social media.

“Tonight I make my debut on The Simpsons as gay, Cuban Julio,” he wrote. “This is a dream come true for me and I was already a living cartoon.”

Julio’s recasting marks one of several recent steps taken by The Simpsons to have long-running characters formerly voiced by white actors instead voiced with more authentic representation.

Hank Azaria recently acknowledged the criticism he’d received for voicing Indian character Apu Nahasapeemapetilon, as well as other characters of color including Carl Carlson and Bumblebee Man.

Azaria said he spoke to “people who knew a lot about racism, spoke to lots of Indian people and went to seminars” and understood that his voicing of Apu contributed to “structural racism.”

“I really didn’t know any better. I didn’t think about it,” he said of his original casting. “I was unaware of how much relative advantage I had received in this country as a white kid from Queens. Just because there were good intentions it doesn’t mean there weren’t real negative consequences to the thing that I am accountable for.”

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The Simpsons recasts gay Cuban character with gay Cuban voice actor – Metro Weekly

Waylon Smithers, Julio, Tony Rodriguez, The Simpsons, gay
Waylon Smithers and Julio in The Simpsons — Photo: Fox

Long-running animated sitcom The Simpsons has recast gay Cuban character Julio, replacing white heterosexual voice actor Hank Azaria with gay Cuban-American actor Tony Rodriguez.

Julio first appeared in the 14th season of The Simpsons and has since featured in 30 episodes, with a variety of roles including Marge’s hairdresser and a love interest for Waylon Smithers — who came out as gay in 2016.

Rodriguez made his first appearance as Julio’s voice actor in the March 2021 episode “Uncut Femmes.”

Before Rodriguez took over the role, Julio was briefly voiced by actor and singer Mario Jose in the February 2021 episode “Dairy Queen,” ComicBook.com reports.

Julio’s recasting comes after a recent lengthy supercut video, “Every LGBT Joke On The Simpsons Ever,” created by Drew Mackie and Glen Lakin of the Gayest Episode Ever podcast.

Matt Selman, an executive producer on The Simpsons, acknowledged the impact the video had behind the scenes of the show.

He responded to the Gayest Episode Ever Twitter account, which celebrated Rodriguez’s first appearance as Julio, noting, “The every gay joke ever on the Simpsons video definitely had a hand in this magic coming together.”

Rodriguez appeared on Gayest Episode Ever to explain explain the role the video played in his casting.

“Matt Selman had seen the supercut, heard the podcast and heard you say my name,” he said. “By that point, my video was out, and he asked the other writers of the show: ‘Does anyone know who Tony Rodriguez is?’”



He added: “We didn’t know they were actively looking to recast, and we didn’t know they had been looking for weeks. Thank god you put [the supercut] out there when you did!”

Ahead of his first episode’s airing, Rodriguez celebrated his casting on social media.

“Tonight I make my debut on The Simpsons as gay, Cuban Julio,” he wrote. “This is a dream come true for me and I was already a living cartoon.”

Julio’s recasting marks one of several recent steps taken by The Simpsons to have long-running characters formerly voiced by white actors instead voiced with more authentic representation.

Hank Azaria recently acknowledged the criticism he’d received for voicing Indian character Apu Nahasapeemapetilon, as well as other characters of color including Carl Carlson and Bumblebee Man.

Azaria said he spoke to “people who knew a lot about racism, spoke to lots of Indian people and went to seminars” and understood that his voicing of Apu contributed to “structural racism.”

“I really didn’t know any better. I didn’t think about it,” he said of his original casting. “I was unaware of how much relative advantage I had received in this country as a white kid from Queens. Just because there were good intentions it doesn’t mean there weren’t real negative consequences to the thing that I am accountable for.”

Read More:

Gay meteorologist accuses news station that fired him of anti-LGBTQ discrimination

Gay teen suspended for wearing nail polish celebrates victory after school updates dress code

Alabama governor signs anti-transgender athlete bill into law

Blinken remembers Bangladesh LGBT rights activist Xulhaz, Tonoy – bdnews24.com

“On the anniversary of his death, we stand with Xulhaz’s family and friends and honour his commitment to creating a world in which all can live with dignity,” Blinken said in a statement issued by the US Department of State on Apr 25.

Xulhaz served for nine years as the protocol specialist for the US Embassy in Dhaka before joining USAID Bangladesh’s Office of Democracy and Governance.

He helped lead programmes to promote human rights, Blinken said.

“We honor his fearless advocacy on behalf of his fellow Bangladeshis and recommit to upholding the dignity and human rights of people around the world.”

On Apr 25 in 2016, Xulhaz was hacked to death by suspected Islamists inside his apartment at Dhaka’s Kalabagan along with his friend, theatre activist Tonoy.

The attack was one of a series of militant-linked assassinations of secular activists and religious minorities and was claimed by the Al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS).

Xulhaz was a cousin of Education Minister and ruling Awami League leader Dipu Moni.

The Counter Terrorism and Transnational Crime unit pressed charges against eight people, including sacked army major Syed Ziaul Haque, over the murders of Xulhaz and Tonoy.