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HRH Report
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Publisher / Executive LAURA M VILLAGRAN
Business Development Manager RANDALL JOBE
Production RAFA ESPINOSA
News Features JOHNNY TRLICA
Copy Editor NANCY FORD Scene Writers JIM AYRES JANICE ANDERSON
Distribution MIRIAM ORIHUELA ELIZABETH MEMBRILLO
THE STAR CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
JIM AYRES by day is an employee benefits and human resources writer. By night he turns his creativity toward the local food and restaurant scene. Do you know of a restaurant that needs a review? Info@montrose-star.com
NANCY FORD has enjoyed a front row seat to the most remarkable and sparkly Cultural Revolution in the history of mankind. “What a world!” She reflects appropriately. After moving to Houston from Ohio in 1981, Ford became a highly visible player in Texas’ LGBT publishing circles as an editor and contributor to myriad other local and statewide LGBT magazines and newspapers.
RANDALL JOBE has been a fixture in the Houston LGBT Community for several decades in marketing and promotions for top nightclubs, as an actor/director/writer for dozens of theatrical productions, and is also known for his whimsical art pieces. He is the author of the 12-part series “This Old Queen”, which summarized his many experiences living in the gay Mecca, Montrose.
VIC GERAMI is journalist, media contributor and Editor & Publisher of The Blunt Post. Vic grew up in LA and has a BA in Theater Arts. He spent six years at Frontiers Magazine, followed by LA Weekly and Voice Media Group. His syndicated celebrity Q&A column, 10 Questions with Vic, is a LA Press Club’s National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Award finalist. Vic is a contributor for Montrose Star, DC Life Magazine, Out & About Nashville, Q Virginia, GNI MAG, QNotes, Windy City Times, WeHo Times, GoWeHo, Los Angeles Blade, Asbarez, California Courier, Desert Daily Guide, Armenian Weekly, GED, The Pride LA, IN Magazine and The Advocate Magazine.
FOREST RIGGS is no stranger to the adventures of life, he bills himself as a “raconteur with a gypsy spirit.” A former educator, public speaker, hospital administrator, counselor and gay owner, he was instrumental in the formation of OutSmart Magazine in the early 1990s. He has written for several newspapers, magazines and other publications. Recently he completed a collection of short stories about his beloved Galveston and is working on a novel. He currently resides on the island where he can be found wasting bait and searching for the meaning of life.
JOHNNY TRLICA has called the Houston area home all of his life. Four years ago he founded and still edits the Houston Rainbow Herald and has worked in the apartment leasing industry for the past two years. His passion is keeping the battle for LGBT rights at the forefront of today’s headlines and fighting complacency in the LGBT community.
Want to whine about injustices? We’ll tell you about injustices
e By Johnny Trlica
COMMENTARY: ONE OF THE MOST DISTURBING SCENES of the past few weeks has been those of protesters demonstrating against stay at home orders. Armed militia are storming Statehouses and city halls all across America to protest stay at home/stay safe orders. Some of the protests have turned violent.
Lady Liberals wrote about in on their Facebook page:
“Protestors. Armed protestors. Armed, masked white protestors. This is the America that keeps me awake at night.
“They can’t be bothered to protest that 65,000+ (now over 70,000) people have died from a pandemic that has seen America react like a third-world country.
“They won’t dress up in their favorite wanna-be soldier gear and protest that this country still doesn’t have its shit together enough to live up to POSPOTUS’s declaration that “anyone who wants a test, can get a test.” A beautiful test. Indeed.
“They refuse to pick up their weaponry to protest the lack of basic medical gear for doctors and nurses and patients. They won’t protest for PPE or ventilators. Oh, hell no!
“They won’t wave an American flag and storm a state capital to protest the fact that in America, some — SOME — of its citizens were handed a measly $1200 while corporations and big business sucked trillions right into their bank accounts. Again.
“They won’t protest for people who literally have NOTHING to eat while farmers plow under their fields and milk gets flushed down the drain because no one can figure out the ‘supply chain.’”
Do you want to know who is not out in the streets acting like wanna-be GI Joe’s? The LGBTQ community, that’s who. While mostly white right-wingers are storming state capital buildings complaining about being told to stay home and wear face coverings and calling social distancing an injustice, we know and understand all too well what an injustice is.
Some Christians and their pastors call it an injustice that they cannot pack their churches with throngs of people who may or may not be nonsymptomatic of a deadly virus, but LGBTQ people are not complaining about our Pride Parades, the biggest events of the year, being cancelled.
San Francisco and New York cancelled their annual June parades. Houston and Galveston have both postponed theirs until the fall. You will not find drag queens, twinks, and bears storming the mayor’s office or marching on the Seawall in protest.
LGBT folks will not be caught pushing park rangers into lakes like a protester did in Austin. We won’t be the ones carrying assault rifles threatening state legislators. We won’t be the ones wiping our face on the Dollar Tree employee who asked us to put on a facemask.
That’s because we have actually experienced injustices so we know one when we see one. When worshipers in churches are invaded by dozens of police officers, rounded up, and carted off to jail just for being there, the way patrons of gay bars have been, they can complain.
When Confederate flag waving “patriots” have to fear being beheaded the way gays and lesbians in some countries do, they can cry injustice.
When a virus such as HIV/AIDS that seemingly targets only their community and their government does nothing for years because the people getting sick and dying, in some people’s eyes, deserve it, they can talk about injustices.
This isn’t the first pandemic queer folks have lived through. We know what it’s like to be scared of catching
Michigan protester screams past police at the state’s capital
an invisible something that can kill you. While President Ronald Reagan, whose administration called it “the gay plague,” looked the other way, our community was amassing casualties by the hundreds of thousands. The W.H.O. states more than 35 million people worldwide have died of HIV/AIDS since the 1980s.
While displaying their entitled eminence and complaining about local officials telling them they cannot go to Chili’s and Applebee’s, our community stays home being safe and watches our favorite drag queens put on marvelous shows from their living rooms.
While threatening store employees compelling them to wear a mask, our community straps on the prettiest and most fabulously decked out face coverings, the kind that would make Bob Mackie proud.
While entitled swastika-wearing boomers are ignoring social distancing guidelines at their neo-military rallies and protests, the LGBTQ community keeps its distance from each other and thinks to ourselves, “Idiots.”
The name of the game is survival. We lived through the HIV/AIDS pandemic by changing our lifestyles and habits, and relying on science to find a treatment and, one day, a cure. That’s how we will survive the coronavirus, too.
The gay community has protested and rioted in the past. The gay rights movement, begun at Stonewall, was a riot. We held protests that demanded equal rights and a cure/treatment for HIV/AIDS. ACT UP and Queer Nation are prime examples of the community’s activism.
The difference between gay rights protests of the past and stay home demonstrations today is that we were fighting for the right to exist, not for the privilege to get a haircut.
Unlike our straight contemporaries, we have faced way too many injustices to label everything we don’t like an injustice. e