Saturday, July 27, 2024
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The Latest Gay News and World Events

I knew we Tucsonans are pretty proud of our fun little city, but there is a whole gay world out there full of amazing people and we should know a little about their lives.  With that in mind, I present to you the Gay News section; a few of my favorite news sources talking about Gay News and Events around the world.  Check back regularly for constantly updated news and information that truly matters.

LGBTQ Nation Gay News

LGBTQ Nation

The Most Followed LGBTQ News Source

"He was constantly yelling at me viciously because my voice was too high."
First of all, his running mate, Sen J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), wrote the forward of a forthcoming book from the head of the initiative.
The Transportation Secretary says the former president and convicted felon is afraid.
The anti-LGBTQ+ British pol has been "milkshaked" twice in real life.
Queer actors George Takei, Raven Symoné, and Zachary Quinto spoke at the event alongside numerous LGBTQ+ elected officials.
The actress also alluded to the Republican VP candidate’s recent opposition to the “Right to IVF Act.”
Harris is making reproductive freedom - including IVF access - central to her campaign.
She said he was never there when she was growing up, reduced her to a "happy little stereotype," and then called her "dead" when she's still alive.
His time in politics has shown him it's "extraordinary" how people can look past their biases.
The Guardian LGBT News Feed
The Guardian LGBT News Feed

LGBTQ+ rights | The Guardian

Latest news and features from theguardian.com, the world's leading liberal voice

Judge dismisses challenge over removal of woman’s name and warns against risks of informal conception arrangements

A woman has lost a court of appeal challenge over her name being removed from a child’s birth certificate after her ex-wife admitted she secretly had sex with their sperm donor.

The “unprecedented” and “unusual” case centred on the question of who were the legal parents of a girl, now aged six.

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Second gentleman tells LGBTQ+ fundraiser his ‘phone was on fire’ after wife Kamala Harris entered spotlight

Doug Emhoff has described being caught by surprise by the timing of Joe Biden’s announcement last Sunday that he was dropping out of his re-election campaign, telling an LGBTQ+ fundraiser that he was in an exercise class in Los Angeles when he heard the news.

Emhoff, 59, the husband of US vice-president Kamala Harris, explained to attendees on a fundraising call organized by a group called Black Gay and Queer Men for Harris that he was with “a gay couple friend” having “coffee, messing around and talking” when people started coming up to them.

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Galvanized by the 2016 murder of trans sex worker Paola Buenrostro, activists applaud law as critical for feeling safe

When the trans sex worker Paola Buenrostro was killed by a client in Mexico City, her friend Kenya Cuevas grabbed the man to stop him fleeing and recorded the scene as police arrived amid sirens, screams and red and blue lights.

Despite the footage and witness testimonies, a judge considered there was insufficient evidence to hold the man and released him after 48 hours, since which time he has been on the run.

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In sexual situations, I freeze and panic, when all I want is to enjoy stress-free physical and romantic relationships

I’m a 26-year-old gay man who is desperately afraid of sex. I haven’t had much sex in the past year, and when I do I tend to freeze and panic, which means that I struggle with erection and orgasm even when I’m with someone I genuinely like. The last time this happened, I felt so sick during foreplay that I wanted to cry and leave. I have major anxiety and body image issues. I also identify as both “a side” (which means I’m not interested in anal sex), and demisexual (on the asexuality spectrum), so I feel as if I’m in this triple minority of being gay, not into anal sex and slow to get comfortable with someone intimately. While I have enjoyed sex in the past, I prefer non-sexual intimacy, such as cuddling. Still, I would like to not be so scared of sex, to be able to relax and engage in romantic and physical relationships stress-free.

Thinking of yourself as being in a “triple minority” is not helpful. Why categorise yourself? You deserve a far better self-view, and not only in terms of body image. Try to ignore the peer pressure. The three aspects of your sexuality you consider to be negative ones need to be reframed as the positive attributes they actually are. For example, allowing yourself adequate time to become comfortable with intimacy is a smart, self-protective way to approach a relationship, and is likely to improve the quality of your sexual connection. If you are not feeling very interested in sex generally, stop forcing yourself to try to do what you think will be approved of by others – although you should also recognise that you could have increased interest in the future if you learn to manage your anxiety, and if you meet someone with whom you feel perfectly safe. Essentially, you are who you are and you do not need to explain, label or excuse yourself. You may meet the arbitrary criteria for “a side” now – a perfectly valid preference, and a style that you’ve found genuinely gives you more options for pleasure – but any of this might change in the future. What matters is that you gather your confidence and always refuse to be anything other than your true, authentic self.

Pamela Stephenson Connolly is a US-based psychotherapist who specialises in treating sexual disorders.

If you would like advice from Pamela on sexual matters, send us a brief description of your concerns to private.lives@theguardian.com (please don’t send attachments). Each week, Pamela chooses one problem to answer, which will be published online. She regrets that she cannot enter into personal correspondence. Submissions are subject to our terms and conditions.

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Julia Fuhr Mann’s impressive feature eschews the usual point-counterpoint conventions that structure arguments in favour of a more artsy approach

As a summer packed with sporting competitions rolls on, this documentary about trans and intersex athletes makes a timely and thoughtful contribution to the wider conversation about sports and gender. Queer film-maker Julia Fuhr Mann’s impressive first feature eschews the usual boring point-counterpoint conventions that structure so many arguments about trans athletes. Instead, Mann opts for woozy, stylised visuals with the colour temperatures turned up to the max and a collage-like approach to editing to find a route into the subject. A gaggle of athletes of various ages, nationalities and gender presentations are filmed visiting the site of the Berlin 1936 Olympics and other iconic spaces; sometimes they talk among themselves about the challenges they’ve faced in their sports while sitting on the grass or loll together affectionately on the bleachers, one participant’s head rested on the lap of another. The effect is both kind of sexy and warmly collegial at once.

Elsewhere, Ugandan runner Annet Negesa tells of discovering she was intersex at the height of her career and the devastating effects that medical interventions had on her. Trans woman Amanda Reiter, a marathon runner, calmly recounts how more often she faces hostility from outraged spectators rather than rivals on the track as the latter are often more aware that having been born a man isn’t the big advantage some make it out to be when it comes to long-distance running in terms of pace, uphill runs and stamina.

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My former colleague Barry Snelgrove, who has died aged 68 of cancer, was a forward thinking senior probation officer. He was involved in a number of groundbreaking initiatives throughout his career before joining the Home Office, where he became a policy adviser on issues connected with offenders.

In total Barry spent 21 years in the National Probation Service, working mainly in the London area. For three years from 1990 he was the director of Sherborne House in Southwark, an experimental day centre run by the Inner London Probation Service (ILPS) for young adult offenders. It provided, among other things, employment skills training, an accommodation finding service and an offending behaviour programme. It began each day by offering participants breakfast, since many of them were homeless.

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The London-born standup on a magical Netflix animation, Joe Lycett’s activist T-shirt, and how she fell in love with pole dancing

The comedian Sophie Duker was born in London in 1990. She studied French and English at Oxford, where she got into improv, and in 2018 performed her first standup show, Diet Woke. Appearances followed on TV comedy stalwarts such as 8 Out of 10 Cats, and in 2022 she won the 13th series of Taskmaster. Duker’s new show, But Daddy I Love Her – about father/daughter therapy and sugar daddies – will run at the Pleasance Courtyard Cabaret Bar in Edinburgh from 31 July to 25 August, and then tours. Her Sugar Daddy scheme will provide 250 £5 tickets via the Pleasance website to people of colour and anyone unwaged or on a low income, available with the code SUGARDADDY.

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Ralf Schumacher’s announcement that he is gay reminds Peter Grimsdale about the life of a leading figure of Britain’s early motor racing scene

Grand prix motor racing may have always looked like a bastion of heterosexuality, but there was one memorable dissenter (Former Formula One driver Ralf Schumacher comes out as gay, 15 July). Raymond Mays, who co-founded both English Racing Automobiles and British Racing Motors from in his family home in Bourne, Lincolnshire, made no attempt to hide his sexual preferences during his 30 years behind the wheel.

As a pupil at Oundle school he annoyed the headmaster with his preference for matching blue socks and handkerchief, and developed passions for both motor racing and the music hall. He chose the former and went on to become one of the founding fathers of Britain’s burgeoning Formula One industry, but among his many racing trophies he always proudly displayed a silver cup from a dance competition at the Casino ballroom in Skegness.
Peter Grimsdale
Author of High Performance: When Britain Ruled the Roads

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After a decades-long battle to discover the truth about what happened to Scott Johnson, his brother Steve has written a book about never giving up

Steve Johnson would be forgiven for turning his back on Australia, the nation that took more than three decades to properly investigate the death of his brother, Scott Johnson, at North Head, Manly, in 1988. Yet he has an affinity with this country, a connection that appears to transcend crime and punishment.

The 65-year-old US IT entrepreneur is speaking to me via Zoom from California before he travels back to Australia for the 26th time, on this occasion not to attend a courtroom or plead for justice but to promote his memoir, A Thousand Miles from Care.

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Giorgia Meloni is trampling what few rights the LGBTQ+ community has – so many just feel grateful to be ‘tolerated’

I was chatting online the other day with a female friend who is undergoing IVF in Italy to have a child with her girlfriend. IVF for lesbian couples is not approved by law in Italy; instead, doctors have the power to decide whether to approve the treatment on a case-by-case basis.

My friend was enthusiastic about her gynaecologist, because, as she told me, “despite being utterly against same-sex parenting, she is helping us do it without objecting”. That conversation left me with a bitter taste and, above all, confirmed how desensitised queer Italians have become to the daily discrimination they face.

Viola Di Grado is an Italian novelist and literary translator. Her latest novel is Blue Hunger

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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Human Rights Watch Gay News

Human Rights Watch News

Click to expand Image A Burkina Faso soldier stands guard in an armored vehicle in the capital, Ouagadougou, October 2, 2022. © 2022 REUTERS/Vincent Bado

(Nairobi) – Burkina Faso authorities should urgently and impartially investigate a video posted on social media showing Burkinabè army soldiers mutilating and disemboweling a dead body, Human Rights Watch said today. All those found responsible for wrongdoing should be appropriately prosecuted, regardless of their rank.

The video, which circulated on social media in late July 2024, shows at least 18 men, wearing identifiable army uniforms, standing by while 2 use knives to disembowel a decapitated and dismembered human body. In a July 24 statement, the Burkinabè army chief of staff, Maj. Col. Célestin Simporé, condemned “these macabre acts at the opposite ends of moral and military values.” He claimed that “steps have been taken” to find the location of the footage and those responsible but did not announce a criminal investigation.

“The gruesome video showing soldiers mutilating a body underscores the pervasive lack of accountability for atrocities that military units have committed in Burkina Faso in recent years,” said Ilaria Allegrozzi, senior Sahel researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Burkinabè authorities should immediately open a transparent and impartial investigation of this brutal incident and appropriately punish all those responsible.”

Human Rights Watch reviewed the 81-second video, interviewed 5 people with knowledge of the incident, and received expert assessment from a physician specializing in forensics. Technical experts in media forensics also analyzed the video file.

In the video, a man in an army uniform with a distinctive Burkina Faso flag on his left shoulder is seen leaning over the mutilated body on the ground. A head lies nearby, alongside the body of a second dead person. The uniformed man plunges a knife into a point just below the sternum and starts cutting. He then plunges his arm into the cavity and appears to be trying to remove body parts without success.

Another man in an army uniform, using what appears to be a small sword, makes cuts into the body, hacking at the sternum 24 times, opening the body’s chest. The first man then takes his knife and cuts what appears to be an organ out of the body. He stands holding the organ while others in army uniform crowd around him. Some exclaim in French, “La patrie ou la mort!” (For the homeland or death!): a common Burkinabè slogan linked to the late Burkinabè revolutionary leader, Thomas Sankara, in the 1980s and adopted by the current military junta.

Four of the men wear the colors of the Burkina Faso national flag on the left lapel of their military jackets or t-shirts, consistent with the Burkinabè military uniform. The men in uniform can be heard saying in French that they are members of the Rapid Intervention Battalion 15 (Bataillon d’Intervention Rapide, BIR-15), a special force involved in counterinsurgency operations against Islamist armed groups, and of the army unit “Cobra 2,” an elite force associated with Burkina Faso’s president, Ibrahim Traoré.

Many of the men shown in the video are carrying Kalashnikov-style assault rifles and are wearing protective tactical vests. Three are wearing military helmets. Their equipment is consistent with that seen in a video published on YouTube in December 2023 by Burkinabè state television to announce the creation of new Rapid Intervention Battalions. The man who appears to remove the organ is carrying a pistol.

In November 2022, President Traoré created six Rapid Intervention Battalions to support military operations against Islamist armed groups. The number of these special forces units has since quadrupled to at least 25. BIR-15 was created by presidential decree on October 25, 2023, and Traoré appointed Capt. Paul Belem as its commander two days later.

The Burkinabè media have reported that BIR-15 is stationed in Gaoua, South-West region, suggesting that the video might have been filmed there, or in surrounding regions, all of which have been affected by the conflict. Two sources, including one close to the army, told Human Rights Watch that the video was filmed between April and May near Nouna, in the Boucle du Mouhoun region.

Human Rights Watch was not independently able to identify where and when the video was filmed, but the languages heard in the video – French, Moore, and Bobo – and the military uniforms worn by the group involved suggest a Burkina Faso location. Human Rights Watch found no version of the video available online before July 23, 2024. Experts in media forensics and artificial intelligence generation and manipulation from the Deepfakes Rapid Response Force, an initiative of WITNESS, a nongovernmental organization, analyzed the video file and concluded that there was no significant evidence of AI manipulation.

The army chief said in his statement that the men in the video were “alleged members of the Burkinabè defense and security forces and of the Volunteers for the Defense of the Homeland (Volontaires pour la défense de la patrie, VDPs).” These are local civilian auxiliaries, first used in 2020, who accompany soldiers during their operations. Since taking power in a September 2022 coup, President Traoré has increased the use of VDPs, and in October 2022, he began a campaign to recruit 50,000 more. The uniforms and the equipment of the men in the video appear to confirm the involvement of defense and security forces, Human Rights Watch said.

In Burkina Faso’s armed conflict, both government security forces and Islamist armed groups have committed numerous atrocities with impunity, fueling cycles of abuse and retaliation. Human Rights Watch has previously documented serious human rights abuses by Rapid Intervention Battalions and VDPs, including the massacre of at least 156 civilians, including 45 children, in the village of Karma, Yatenga province, in April 2023. BIR soldiers were also implicated in the summary executions of at least 223 civilians, including 56 children, in the villages of Soro and Nondin in February.

Burkina Faso government forces have been fighting the Al-Qaeda-linked Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wa al-Muslimeen, JNIM) and the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS) since the armed groups entered the country from neighboring Mali in 2016. The groups control large swathes of territory in the country, have attacked civilians as well as government security forces, and have also fought each other. The conflict has killed thousands of people since 2016 according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED), a disaggregated data collection, analysis, and crisis-mapping project, and forced over two million people from their homes.

Customary international humanitarian law applicable to the conflict in Burkina Faso prohibits the “mutilation of dead bodies.” Mutilating bodies in non-international armed conflicts is the war crime of “committing outrages upon personal dignity” under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), to which Burkina Faso is a party. Under international human rights law, the United Nations Human Rights Committee has indicated that the disrespectful treatment of human remains may amount to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of the family of the dead.

“The Burkinabè authorities should rein in abusive military units and civilian auxiliaries and fully investigate and prosecute those implicated in abuse,” Allegrozzi said. “Concerned governments need to press the military junta to put an end to the atrocities like those found in the video.”