NOVEMBER 21, 2019 |
QSALTLAKE MAGAZINE | 7
ISSUE 306
news The top national and world news since last issue you should know BY CRAIG OGAN
More religious liberty shenanigans National Adoption Month started off on the wrong foot with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services authorizing adoption agencies affiliated with a religion to deny services to LGBT parents. The proposed regulation ends the policy that prohibited federally funded agencies from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. The new regulations, though still in the 30-day public comment stage, will go into effect immediately. HHS said the rule “imposed a regulatory burden.” Other programs that could be affected by the extension of the religious-liberty argument are elder services, Head Start, refugee resettlement, HIV services, and programs for runaways.
Cuomo misgenders himself, maybe? Chris Cuomo thumbs couldn’t move fast enough on Twitter to apologize for a lame joke about gender pronouns. At the CNN LGBT Forum, Sen. Kamala Harris declared her pronouns as “she, her and hers.” With a twinkle in his eye, Cuomo responded, “She, her and hers? Mine too.” The backlash was swift on Twitter, where, among others, GLAAD tweeted “it was so disappointing” for Cuomo to mock
Harris’ declaration “on such a major stage.” The National Center for Lesbian Rights, meanwhile, tweeted that “people’s pronouns are not a punchline.” Cuomo said he was sorry, but in either a syntactical error or a subtle “coming out,” said he should be forgiven because he is “committed to helping us achieve quality.”
UK survey good news, bad news The Annual Hate Crime Report in Great Britain contains a little good news for LGBT people, such as more than 4 in 5 people said that LGBT+ people should be free to live as they wish. Bad news: 18to 24-year-olds hold higher negative views towards LGBT communities than other age groups. And 20 percent of the 1,600 adults polled say LGBT should not be free to live as they wish, with 25 percent of 18 to 24 sharing that view. Ten percent of all people polled said being LGBTQ could be “cured.” Twenty percent of under 25 agreed with a possible cure, compared to 5 percent of those ages 55-65. Three percent of the older group said LGBT are dangerous with 16 percent of 18 to 24 sniffing danger.
Bi congressperson resigns Katie Hill, elected to U.S. Congress from California, declared her bisexuality as part of her campaign and proved it by having consensual affairs with both male and female campaign and congressional staffers. Her husband, in the middle of a divorce action, released nude photos of her on the internet. She resigned rather than fight a Congressional Ethics Committee complaint about her staff dalliances. She blamed her troubles on an “abusive ex,”
sexual shaming, the general misogyny of U.S. culture, a broken political system, and the current president.
March On DC, blink and you’ll miss it If you blinked you probably missed the dozen or so individuals who no longer identify as gay or lesbian marching on Washington D.C. to lobby against the Equality Act and the Therapeutic Fraud Act. Sponsored by Church United and a political group named “Changed,” marchers claimed that, “Changing the Civil Rights Act would create a super-class for anyone identifying as LGBTQ at the expense of people who are not.” They argued the Equality Act would provide workplace and housing protections for gender and sexual minorities for “discrimination that does not exist.”
St. Louis fined $20 million How much is “your gayness” worth? To a St. Louis, Missouri police officer, it’s $20 million. The officer sued St. Louis County for job discrimination after he was passed over for promotion because he is a gay man. He said he was told by a member of the county’s Board of Police Commissioners that his sexuality was holding him back and he’d have to change to advance, “If you ever want to see a white shirt [get a promotion], you should tone down your gayness.” He filed a complaint with the feds and then sued. The jury awarded him $20 million. “We wanted to send a message,” the jury foreman said. “If you discriminate you are going to pay a big price.”
Male couples dance on TV competitions The USA’s Dancing with the Stars, serves up Sean Spicer in a cabana shirt and gay men
dancing their little hearts out with C-list starlets. The BBC in the United Kingdom serves up two hot guys dancing while vocalist Emeli Sande belts one out on Strictly Come Dancing. One of the men, professional dancer Johannes Radebe a from South Africa is gay and the other, Graziano di Prima, is straight, but it was a hot 3.5 minutes. After the show, Radebe posted photos with the comment “Love knows no boundaries.” Di Palma, like most “Hets” reaction to their first time with a gay man, tweeted, “Unforgettable moment.” In Denmark, Jakob Fauerby and Silas Holst are making history with their appearance together on Vild med Dans, Denmark TV’s version of the DWTS franchise. They are the first same-sex couple in the show’s history and have scored the highest points in four out of eight episodes.
‘Queer Eye’ star mobbed Speaking of Dancing with the Stars, last summer, Queer Eye star Karamo Brown was cast with former presidential spokesperson Sean Spicer. Brown said some nice things about Spicer, even using the word “friendship” in People magazine. That was enough to spur the “outraged mob” to flood Brown’s social media with sobs of, “How dare you?” The mobbing was so bad he deactivated his Twitter account. The bullying worked, though. In a recent interview, Brown took it all back saying, “There was no friendship. I was just saying that if we’re going to be on the same show, I’m going to have a respectful conversation with someone who’s different from me.” Brown was voted off the show, but Spicer continues to dance, albeit, Brown says, “rhythmically challenged.”