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No repeal of DADT, Sen. Gillibrand to push for hearings

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The Daily Beast’s Jason Bellini is reporting that Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) has decided she does not have enough support in the Senate to pass a repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, the legally-mandated ban on openly LGBT people serving in the military. Even with Senate Majority Leader former servicemembers are encouraged by Representative Jared Polis’ (D-CO) appointment to the board that oversees the Airforce Academy by Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA). Polis is a well-known opponent of DADT.

Meanwhile, PHB reports that the SLDN is trying to create a grassroots movement to support the repeal of DADT, although Bellini’s story says current polls show 69% of Americans support allowing LGBT Americans into the armed forces.

(via Pam’s House Blend)

Photo: Wikipedia

U of M moves to protect Trans rights

transcom-members1_6VjyLThree weeks ago, the University of Minnesota’s Board of Regents approved a little-noticed change in the University’s Diversity, Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action policy, to explicitly include gender identity and gender expression in the list of categories protected from discrimination. Advocates for the trans community at the University are hailing the move as an important first step in both combating hate crimes against trans people, and more broadly building recognition of the needs of the trans community.

“It’s a fundamental and essential statement that everyone here has the right to their own gender and self-expression, that we should have the ability to use the symbols to express our identity that feel appropriate to each one of us,” said Ross Neely, the Coordinator of the Transgender Commission at the University.

The inclusion of gender expression was very important,” said MJ Gilbert, a teaching specialist at the University’s School of Social Work and Co-Chair of the Transgender Commission. “It protects the men’s basketball team, the women’s basketball team, it protects you, and it protects [University President] Bob Bruininks,” because it protects how each person chooses to express their gender, she said.

The Commission is an official body of the University, made up of students, staff, and faculty, and has been the driving force behind the policy change.

Members of the Transgender Commission said it was only recently that the change was possible, due to the new make-up of the board of regents. Although members wouldn’t name specific regents opposed to the measure, Neely said “in previous years, got messages through various channels that particular regents would have stalled, resisted, or pushed back through various channels.”

The most crucial changes, though, were perhaps the most banal — an administrative restructuring that put the Transgender Commission under one Vice President, charged with overseeing diversity and equity issues, that gave the Commission a high-powered advocate. “This is a large bureaucratic institution that turns slowly,” said Gilbert.

Vice President Nancy “Rusty” Barceló “really stood up,” Gilbert said. “There were a number of changes in the equity and diversity statements happening at the same time – [Barceló’s office] could have hidden this…instead, a lengthy presentation was made to the regents” about what gender identity and expression mean, and why they’re important to protect, and consider alongside race or sexuality.

Gilbert said that the changes to the anti-discrimination policies laid the groundwork for future efforts to advance respect for trans rights at the University.

According to Anne Phibbs, Director of the University’s GLBT Programs Office, there are “definitely places where we need more education, but there aren’t places we can point to and say there’s overt discrimination. At the same time, there are definitely people and places [at the University] that are transphobic, homophobic, biphobic.”

At the same time, she said, “there’s a lot of activism” for the rights of gender non-conforming people.

“Have we seen really awful hate crimes? No,” Said Neely. “But do we think it would be safe, or easy, or affirming to transition while in the dorms? No.”

Photo: Members of the University of Minnesota’s Transgender Commission. Left to Right: Ross Neely, Anne Phibbs, and MJ Gilbert.

[Updated] Bomb attacks at the Outgames

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goalieThe 2008 OutGames saw the second violent attack in a week as small bombs were thrown onto the track, injuring a Seattle-area athlete. Edge Boston has the details. Competitions at the world-wide LGBT athletic event were paused, but resumed 90 minutes after the first bomb was thrown. Danish police say they are holding two men in connection with the case.

Earlier in the week, three men were attacked at the games’ opening ceremonies. All received minor injuries, and police are holding two suspects for the attacks. Because the men reportedly yelled epithets like “homo pig” as they beat and kicked the three tourists, Danish police say they are treating the beatings as a hate crime.

Photo: The Opening Ceremonies of the 2006 Outgames in Montreal, Canada. Source: Wikipedia

The award for most heart-warming couple goes to…

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Two Florida lesbians are celebrating their 70th wedding anniversary…oh, just go read it already. You’ll feel happy.

“We’re not going to have a party,” said Magazzu, 97, insisting they are too old for such things.

“Oh yes we are,” responded Leto, 96, who noted the two can still polka. “This is a big one.”

Indeed. A party celebrating 70 years together is a big deal for any pair. But a celebration of this couple’s love takes on special meaning, considering they had to keep silent about it for decades.

Photo: Wikipedia

Well-Known Harvard Professor Arrested

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Historian and Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. was arrested Thursday afternoon by Cambridge, MA, police as they responded to a reported break-in at Gates’ home. Gates and fellow members of the Harvard faculty are calling the incident a clear case of racial profiling.

Gates is best-known for his scholarship on Black American history, but has also been a strong voice supporting LGBT activists who claim a space in the civil rights movement.

According to the Boston Globe, who broke the story, and the Associated Press, Gates had just returned from a trip to find his front door jammed shut, and was trying to free it when a passerby called to report “two black males with backpacks on the porch,” with one ”wedging his shoulder into the door as if he was trying to force entry.”

When police arrived at Gates’ two-story home near the Harvard Faculty Club, Gates was already inside, calling the property’s maintenance company. Police demanded the professor show him identification, sparking an argument where Gates upbraided the police officer, accusing him of racial profiling. “‘Why, because I’m a black man in America?” Gates said, according to the police report.

Friends of Gates, according to the Globe, say the professor eventually gave him both his driver’s license and his Harvard identification card. Eventually, police arrested and handcuffed Gates, booking him for disorderly conduct. Gates was later released after paying a $40 fee. The Middlesex County District Attorney’s office has stated it will not pursue the charges against Gates.

“He and I both raised the question of if he had been a white professor, whether this kind of thing would have happened to him, that they arrested him without any corroborating evidence,” S. Allen Counter, a Harvard Medical School professor told the Globe.

These issues are not new to Harvard students, faculty, and staff. The Globe reports that Coulter himself had a similar run-in with University police.

The well-known neuroscience professor, who is also black, was stopped by two Harvard police officers in 2004 after being mistaken for a robbery suspect as he crossed Harvard Yard [the University’s central commons]. They threatened to arrest him when he could not produce identification.

Jimi Izrael at The Root calls this a “‘Crash’ Moment,” highlighting the way class and race played out in the professor’s arrest.

Based on his statement and looking at the police report, it looks like he had too much conversation for the po-po, and they felt the need to make a point. I can empathasize with Skip, but when the cops come to your house, it’s never a social call. Offer them coffee and a sweet roll, but this is no time to conversate. If they annoy you, get their unit number off the car and note the time, but there’s nothing to argue about because you won’t win any arguments with the police. The cops mishandled this situation. Even still, I’m no Harvard professor, but I know there is protocol when detained by the police–even Pookie knows that. In any event, maybe Skip’s experience is a Crash Moment for the rest of us who haven’t figured that out, even though we may have multiple degrees, live in big houses and we have a black president, class still doesn’t trump race. You and Cousin Pookie have more in common than you ever imagined.

Appology for Ft. Worth Bar Raid

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The Dallas Voice has an exclusive interview with the official in charge of the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission, the agency behind the June 29th raid on The Rainbow Lounge, a Ft. Worth, Texas gay bar. According to the Voice, TABC Administrator Alan Steen said TABC agents involved in the raid committed several “clear violations” of agency policy.

“I don’t think you have to dig very deep to figure out that TABC has violated some of their policies,” Steen said. “We know that, and I apologize for that. Like I said in my original press release, we have in the past and we will in the future act very swiftly in making sure that those issues are corrected.”

From the Dallas Voice article:

Steen said he doesn’t think there was sufficient cause for the inspection, which apparently was based on the fact that one person had been arrested for public intoxication at the Rainbow Lounge on Thursday, June 25. Steen also indicated that the eight law enforcement officers and the paddy wagon that were present likely constituted an excessive show of force.

“You can read that policy and you can figure out really quickly, TABC shouldn’t have even been there,” Steen said. “If our guys would have followed the damn policy, we wouldn’t even have been there.

H/T The Box Turtle Bulletin

Harry Reid: Repeal DADT for good, but HRC urges caution

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Yesterday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid “came out” in favor of repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell permanently. Piggybacking on a proposal that New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand is considering, Reid said he would prefer a permanent moratorium on the Pentagon’s Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy, rather than the 18-month suspension suggested by Gillibrand.

According to the NY Times’ Caucus blog:

Ms. Gillibrand, eager to court support from the large New York gay community and improve her standing with liberals prior to her election bid next year, is reportedly considering trying to add a moratorium to the Pentagon policy measure now being considered in the Senate.

The Human Rights Campaign thinks it’s a long shot, though,
according to The Advocate,.

“HRC believes that this temporary repeal amendment should only be offered and voted on if we are confident that there are sufficient votes to advance the issue of permanent repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” said HRC legislative director Allison Herwitt. “It is not yet clear that threshold can be achieved this week.”

Photo courtesy of the Office of Senator Harry Reid

Bedlam Theatre Plays with Fire

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Part dance performance, part puppet theater, part carnival side-show, Bedlam Theatre’s annual fire-fest was a wonderful spectacle, well worth seeing. The flaming whip, fire fans, and burning dresses alone were, dare I say, “cool.”

Insert more cheap fire jokes here.

Still, The Burning Ones: The Origin of Flame felt rough around the edges, and left me disappointed, as director Rah Kojis didn’t really step beyond the “wow factor” inherent in any fire show.

The production is loosely based around a bedtime story read by an exasperated father to his children, about a mad scientist whose discovery of fire sparks something in his neighbors, a love of flame that supposedly changes their lives forever. The story is told through a series of dances and vignets filled with a mix of dances built around flaming props and fire-spitting; narration is provided partly by shadow puppets and partly by the father character as he reads to his children.

Overlooking technical problems with the father-narrator’s wireless microphone (the show is held outdoors, in Bedlam’s parking lot) and the occasional under-fueled torch (performers conserve their fuel for the last weekend of the show), the performance nonetheless felt sketch-like and pregnant with unfulfilled potential. Performers in synchronized dance pieces were frequently out-of-sync, and in a few dance-oriented scenes, intriguing movements and themes were introduced, but the performers almost always held back from expanding on them. Perhaps this is because, beyond the simple storyline above, it’s not clear that Kojis intended to explore any particular themes other than the sheer, undeniable coolness of being brave enough to do anything with flaming swords, umbrellas, and fans in your hands.

Perhaps this is something Kojis, one of the Twin Cities’ premier fire artists, could step beyond in future shows. Some dancers had started to play with the shapes created by their props, and there were hints of passion in parts of a few pieces — fire gives Kojis plenty of material to work with, and given her undeniable skills as a fire performer and a dancer (shown off during Origin of Flame), I’d be eager to see what she might produce.

“The Burning Ones: Origin of Flame” plays at Minneapolis’ Bedlam Theatre Thursday-Sunday, 9pm, July 9TH-18TH in the Bedlam parking lot. Tickets $12 Thu/Sun and $15 Fri/Sat (no one turned away for lack of funds). Vaudeville performance following the performance on the 17th; Bedlam’s 16th Birthday Party to follow the performance on the 18th.

Obama Promises Action at White House Stonewall Reception

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Following hot on the heels of last week’s controversial Democratic National Committee fundraiser, President Obama tried to smooth ruffled feathers over his administration’s support for the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) at a White House reception marking the 40th anniversary of the Stonewall Riot. Several prominent LGBT and Ally leaders, including former DNC Chair Gov. Howard Dean, boycotted the fundraiser to protest a brief issued by the Justice Department supporting DOMA.

I’ve called on Congress to repeal the so-called Defense of Marriage Act to help end discrimination against same-sex couples in this country. Now, I want to add we have a duty to uphold existing law, but I believe we must do so in a way that does not exacerbate old divides. And fulfilling this duty in upholding the law in no way lessens my commitment to reversing this law. I’ve made that clear.

The fundraiser reportedly netted $1 million, according to DNC officials, but Pam at Pam’s House Blend quotes an unnamed source that it only garnered $250,000 in donations, if they’re “lucky” lucky.

Elsewhere in his speech, Obama promised action on some major LGBT legislative agenda items – the Employee Non-discrimination Act, a comprehensive hate crimes bill, and a repeal of the military’s Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy. Towleroad has the full guest list here.

Happy Anniversary!

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One person is in the hospital after Fort Worth, TX Police raided The Rainbow Lounge, a local gay bar, on Saturday night, arresting seven patrons for “excessive intoxication.” Officials from the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission (TABC) say the raid is part of a controversial new policy targeting patrons who “pose a clear danger to public safety,” but witnesses say officers grabbed patrons and used excessive force, including throwing one patron, Chad Gibson, to the ground and knocking him unconscious. Gibson is in a Fort Worth hospital, and may need surgery to stop bleeding in his brain.

Pictures here.

Police say the raid was part of a larger sweep Saturday night, but previous coverage of the policy doesn’t include stories like the one DailyKos blogger lostboyjim pulled from the comments section of a Dallas Voice blog post on the raid:

I was one of the dance entertainers last night at Rainbow Lounge. I was dancing on a box in the VIP lounge and was looking right at the first guy that was arrested. The male patron was standing at the bar doing nothing but having a having a drink and a fun time (like people do in bars) when an officer entered that section of the club and made a beeline straight towards him. The officer forcefully spun the man around, shoved him against the bar and placed plastic restraints on his wrists. The officer then marched the man out the club. The guy was stunned and obviously really scared…

Police claim patrons grabbed at their crotches, and made other “sexually explicit moves” towards officers, but Dallas Voice Senior Editor Tammye Nash posted comments from one witness saying patrons were not resisting officers.

Around 200 members of the Dallas/Ft. Worth LGBTA community rallied in front of the county courthouse yesterday afternoon to protest, but it is unclear what next steps will be taken. Police have promised an investigation into the incident, and Ft. Worth’s first openly gay city councilman has said he is working with the Mayor, state legislature, Police Chief, and the Fort Worth Human Relations Commission to get “a complete and accurate accounting of what occurred.”

(picture: Dallas Voice)

Update (6/30/09, 12pm): Ft. Worth police are claiming Gibson fell because he was intoxicated, but the symptoms of serious head injury can look quite similar if you’re out looking for drunks. The Box Turtle Bulletin lays out the similarities.