Thursday, April 30, 2009

Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews go off on GOP rep who called Matthew Shepard murder 'a hoax'

(Written by John Aravosis of AmericaBlog, posted there, agreed too 100% here and for your reading.)

As you'll recall, yesterday we wrote about the Republican House member in charge of opposing the hate crimes amendment, Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC), who referred to the brutal murder of young gay college student Matthew Shepard as "a hoax." Well, Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews both had a few things to say about Ms. Foxx.





And just to remind everyone, America already has a hate crimes law. We've had it for decades. But it only covers race, religion and national origin - in other words, it covers the religious right. It doesn't cover everyone else. The amendment, which passed in the House yesterday, would add gender, disability, sexual orientation and gender identity to the already-existing law. Regardless of your feelings towards hate crimes laws, if America is going to have one on the books - and it does already - the law should cover everyone, and not just give special rights to the Christian fundamentalists at the Family Research Council, the American Family Association, and the men at the Concerned Women for America.

TIHAN Makes Connection Between National Poll on HIV/AIDS and Local Efforts

TUCSON (Observer Update) - On April 28, 2009, the Kaiser Family Foundation released their latest poll on Americans’ attitudes about HIV/AIDS. Their headlines were:

“LESS THAN A YEAR AFTER CDC ANNOUNCED THE U.S. HIV EPIDEMIC IS MUCH LARGER THAN PREVIOUSLY THOUGHT, PUBLIC’S SENSE OF URGENCY IS DOWN, EVEN AMONG SOME HIGHER RISK GROUPS”

“Sense of Personal Risk Falls for Young Adults, Testing Rates are Stagnant”

“Amidst Call for Stepped Up Focus on Domestic HIV/AIDS, There is Public Support for More Spending and the Public Believes Greater Efforts on Prevention Will Make a Difference”

The press release goes on to say, “The share of those ages 18-29 who say they are personally very concerned about becoming infected with HIV declined from 30 percent in 1997 to 17 percent today.” The Tucson Interfaith HIV/AIDS Network (TIHAN) believes that young Tucsonans need to know the facts of HIV/AIDS to prevent becoming infected, know that HIV infection is not a ‘death sentence,’ and realize when they need to be tested for HIV. TIHAN provides free educational presentations on HIV/AIDS without prejudice or proselytism. These presentations are essential to combat the myths surrounding HIV/AIDS, even after over 20 years of the AIDS epidemic. As the Kaiser Family Foundation report said, “Misconceptions may be a factor in stigma, and several remain when it comes to correct information about HIV transmission. One-third (34%) of Americans incorrectly believe or are unsure whether HIV can be transmitted by one of the following actions: sharing a drinking glass (27%), touching a toilet seat (17%), or swimming in a pool with an HIV positive person (14%)…People who harbor misconceptions about transmission are more likely to say they would be uncomfortable working with someone with HIV (43% versus 13% who correctly answered questions about transmission) and more likely to be uncomfortable having their food prepared by an HIV positive person (71% compared to 40%).” Armed with accurate information and resources, Tucsonans can help educate others and alleviate the suffering and stigma by volunteering to support those living with HIV right here in our community. To respond to the need for education and volunteering, TIHAN has scheduled a four-hour orientation for those interested in learning more and getting involved. TIHAN Volunteer Orientation is Thursday, May 14, 5:15-9:15 p.m. at First Congregational Church United Church of Christ, 1350 North Arcadia Avenue (north of Speedway Boulevard). Cost is $17 which includes a light meal and printed materials. Call TIHAN, 299-6647, to sign up.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

GLAAD Condemns, Urges Media to Spotlight Rep. Virginia Foxx's Claim That Hate Crime Murder of Matthew Shepard Was "A Hoax"

NEW YORK CITY (Observer Update) - The Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation today called on the nation's media to scrutinize the statement made today by Congresswoman Virginia Foxx (R-N.C.) on the floor of the House of Representatives claiming that the 1998 hate crime murder of Matthew Shepard was "a hoax."

The House of Representatives today debated and passed the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009. This legislation would expand existing federal hate crimes law --which currently addresses hate crimes committed against people based on their race, color, religion and national origin -- to also protect people based on their actual or perceived gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or disability. A companion bill, the Matthew Shepard Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act, was re-introduced today in the U.S. Senate.

While arguing against the legislation, Foxx said: "The hate crimes bill that's called the Matthew Shepard Bill [sic] is named after a very unfortunate incident that happened where a young man was killed. But we know that that young man was killed in the commitment of a robbery. It wasn't because he was gay. The bill was named for him, the hate crimes bill was named for him, but it's, it's really a hoax, that that continues to be used as an excuse for passing these bills."

"Congresswoman Foxx's comments are repugnant and should be condemned by all fair-minded people in the strongest possible terms," said GLAAD President Neil G. Giuliano. "We urge media to expose Foxx's falsehood and her malicious disregard for the basic facts of this case."

Media Matters Action Network has published a video and transcript of Foxx's comments:
http://mediamattersaction.org/items/200904290005

In 2004, GLAAD published a Viewers' Guide that refuted inaccurate and revisionist claims made in a 20/20 report on Matthew's murder. You can read the previous media release and the full report at http://www.glaad.org/matthewshepard2020.

H.R. 1913 Update - Hate Crimes Bill Approved By U.S. House

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Observer Update) -

The U.S. House of Representatives passed an LGBT-inclusive federal hate-crimes bill on Wednesday afternoon with a 249-175 vote. Democratic representative Jerrold Nadler of New York, chair of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties, applauded the passage of the Matthew Shepard Act.

"The law routinely looks to the motivation behind a criminal act and treats the more heinous of them differently," Nadler said on the House floor. "Manslaughter is different from premeditated murder, which is different from a contract killing. We also punish crimes differently if they are terrorist acts, defined as violent acts that 'appear to be intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population.'"

Republican representative Virginia Foxx of North Carolina said that the idea of Matthew Shepard's murder being called a hate crime is "a hoax" while his mother, Judy Shepard, looked on to the House floor from the gallery. Speaking of the slain college student, whose parents have since become ardent voices for the legislation, Foxx said, "we know that that young man was killed in the commitment of a robbery. It wasn't because he was gay. This -- the bill was named for him, [the] hate-crimes bill was named for him, but it’s really a hoax that continues to be used as an excuse for passing these bills."

A Senate version of the bill was introduced Tuesday. Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign, anticipated the Senate would vote on the legislation, now called the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act, by the end of the year.

"We're confident that we'll make progress in the Senate as well," Solmonese said. "We're in conversations with Senator [Harry] Reid and other leaders in the Senate to try to determine the most expeditious way to move the bill and one that keeps that bill intact and gets it to the president's desk."

President Obama issued a statement Tuesday, putting his full weight behind the measure: "I urge members on both sides of the aisle to act on this important civil rights issue by passing this legislation to protect all of our citizens from violent acts of intolerance -- legislation that will enhance civil rights protections, while also protecting our freedom of speech and association. I also urge the Senate to work with my administration to finalize this bill and to take swift action."

The bipartisan Senate bill is being carried by Democrat Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts and Republican Olympia Snowe of Maine. Other cosponsors include Democrat Patrick Leahy of Vermont, Republican Susan Collins of Maine, and Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, who switched his affiliation Tuesday from Republican to Democrat.

Civil rights and faith groups held a press conference call urging swift passage of the bill with leaders from the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, American Association of People With Disabilities, American Civil Liberties Union, Human Rights Campaign, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, National Council of La Raza, and the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism.

Caroline Frederickson, director of the ACLU's Washington legislative office, said that discussion on the House floor Wednesday was sure to include warnings that the bill would impinge on freedom of speech and religious practices. She countered that since 2005 the bill has included specific provisions to protect basic First Amendment rights.

"The bill specifically blocks evidence of speech and associations that is not specifically related to the crimes," she said, adding, "This bill will have the strongest protection against the misuse of a person's free speech that Congress has enacted in the federal criminal code."

The Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act enhances federal involvement to combat hate crimes and authorizes the U.S. Justice Department to investigate and prosecute bias-motivated violence against a person based on actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability, advocate.com reported.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Statement by the President on H.R. 1913, the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009

This week, the House of Representatives is expected to consider H.R. 1913, the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009. I urge members on both sides of the aisle to act on this important civil rights issue by passing this legislation to protect all of our citizens from violent acts of intolerance – legislation that will enhance civil rights protections, while also protecting our freedom of speech and association. I also urge the Senate to work with my Administration to finalize this bill and to take swift action.

Help us tour Ward 3!

Dear Friends,

It continues to heat up, both outside and on the campaign trail. Three months into the race, the landscape is drastically different than the last time I wrote to you. As you likely know, I will be facing a strong Republican challenger in November. It is going to be a long, tough summer and fall, but together we can be successful.

It is costly - but essential - to get our message out to voters throughout the city. Raising this money early sends a strong message of broad support. Because of your amazing support, we have already raised $35,365!

But to continue our pace and to meet our goal of $38,000 by the end of this month - by midnight Thursday - I need your help. Click here to give $10, $50, or even $410 securely online. Or maybe you can commit to getting 3 of your friends to donate? You can easily forward this email using the link below, or you can click here to print out our donation form and pass it on.

TAKE A TOUR WITH US! Tucson’s Ward 3 is incredibly diverse. Stretching from the river down to Speedway and from the freeway over to Columbus, it abounds with hidden treasures. So as we try to raise the $2,635 over these next few days, take a virtual tour with us of our beautiful town. With each $500 received we will move to a new spot on the Ward 3 map. We are kicking off our tour with the historic Georgia O’Keefe-designed sign at the Ghost Ranch Lodge on Miracle Mile west of Oracle.

Let's tour Ward 3!

So check back as we continue our sightseeing in Ward 3! And please click here to donate and help move us along on our trip. Your efforts truly make a difference.

Thank you very much.

Sincerely yours,

Karin Uhlich

Councilmember - Ward 3

H.R. 1913 Update - By Mark R. Kerr

As previously reported, on Thursday, April 23, the House Judiciary Committee held hearings to markup H.R. 1913, the "Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009,” and after a day of debate and Republican attempts to gut the proposed legislation, by a vote 15 in favor, 12 against, the bill was approved.

As written in the right-wing media outlets and blaring on Fixed Noise, H.R. 1913 would not create a thought police, stifle religious freedom or punish someone for their beliefs. H.R. 1913 would strengthen law enforcement’s ability to fight violent crime – not vigorous debate, not sermons against homosexuality, not hateful speech, not the spreading of misinformation that thrives on constitutionally protected right-wing television, radio, and blogosphere.

"Nothing in this Act, or the amendments made by this Act,” H.R. 1913 states, “shall be construed to prohibit any expressive conduct protected from legal prohibition by, or any activities protected by the free speech or free exercise clauses of, the First Amendment to the Constitution."

“In a prosecution for an offense under this section, evidence of expression or association of the defendant may not be introduced as substantive evidence at trial, unless the evidence specifically relates to that offense. However, nothing in this section affects the rules of evidence governing the impeachment of a witness."

If that sounds familiar for those living in Arizona, because the federal legislation has been written with Arizona’s hate crimes law in mind, since it was one of a few to survive a court case that went to the U.S. Supreme Court year’s back, which ruled most state’s laws dealing with hate crimes, unconstitutional.

What H.R. 1913 actually does is give the Justice Department the power to investigate and prosecute bias motivated violence where the perpetrator has selected the victim because of the person's actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or disability.

It provides the Justice Department with the ability to aid state and local jurisdictions either by lending assistance or, where local authorities are unwilling or unable, by taking the lead in investigations and prosecutions of violent crime resulting in death or serious bodily injury that were motivated by bias.

H.R. 1913 makes grants available to state and local communities to combat violent crimes committed by juveniles, train law enforcement officers, or to assist in state and local investigations and prosecutions of bias motivated crimes. (Both Southern Arizona Representatives, Congressman Raul Grijalva, D-CD 7 and Gabrielle Giffords, D-CD 8 are cosponsors)

Very soon, H.R. 1913 will be taken up by the full U.S. House of Representatives and voted on. “We've received word that the House will vote on the Matthew Shepard Act very soon and we know that right-wing groups are flooding Congress with calls, emails and sickening ‘fact sheets’ full of lies about the lives of LGBT Americans,” said Human Rights Campaign President Joe Solmonese. “We need more calls to Members of Congress, and we need them right away. It has been ten long years and tens of thousands more victims since the Matthew Shepard Act was first introduced in Congress. We are poised for a presidential signature this year but lies from the radical right could easily derail our efforts. We must not allow them to continue to demagogue and distort the truth.”

It takes about 45 seconds. Members of the community are urged to call (202) 224-3121. Callers are urged to tell the Member’s office: Hate crimes against Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender people are on the rise. One out of every six hate crimes is because of the victim's sexual orientation. Hate crimes have more than one victim. They are intended to create an atmosphere of fear and terrorize entire communities. H.R. 1913 only violent acts – not speech. It does not tell any clergy member what he or she can or can't preach.

Because there is no federal law mandating states and municipalities to report hate crimes, they are often under reported. However, the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s own statistics, based on voluntary reporting, show that since 1991 over 100,000 hate crime offenses have been reported to the FBI, with 7,624 reported in 2007, the FBI’s most recent reporting period. Violent crimes based on sexual orientation constituted 16.6 percent of all hate crimes in 2007, with 1,265 reported for the year.

To take further action to support the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009 (H.R. 1913), please visit: FightHateNow.org.

Call Your U.S. Rep to Stop Hate Crimes and to Support H.R. 1913

Call your member of Congress toll-free at 866-346-4611 TODAY, April 28th and urge support of the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act (LLEHCPA) (The Matthew Shepard Act) to fight hate crimes and ensure safety and security for all people.

Congress will vote on The Matthew Shepard Act tomorrow! Please act today!

In our increasingly diverse nation, hate crimes are a persistent problem. Although there are laws on the books to deter hate crimes, protect victims, and prosecute crimes, significant improvements can still be made.

The Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act (H.R. 1913) known as The Matthew Shepard Act expands the coverage of existing hate crime laws to include not only victims of crime based on race, color, religion, and national origin, but also bias-motivated crimes based on the victim's actual or perceived sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, or disability. H.R. 1913 also provides for federal involvement in prosecuting hate crimes in states where current law or local actions are inadequate.

Hate crimes cut across all of our communities and The Matthew Shepard Act (H.R. 1913) is needed to ensure that all people have the right to be safe and free from physical harm and intimidation. Call your representative toll-free at 866-346-4611, Tuesday, April 28th, and urge support of H.R. 1913 to fight hate crimes and provide safety and security for all people.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Lambda Legal Update

Lambda Legal today issued the following statement on the first day that marriage licenses are being issued to same-sex couples in Iowa.

Statement from Kevin Cathcart, Executive Director at Lambda Legal:

"At Lambda Legal we are thrilled to extend our congratulations and warmest wishes to the couples and their families who can celebrate today and in the future because their relationships will now be honored and treated equally under the law.

"When the Iowa Supreme Court issued its unanimous decision in Lambda Legal’s marriage equality case, history was made not only for Iowans, but for the entire nation. Within days, the Vermont legislature enacted a marriage equality bill and proposed bills are now pending in other states. Equality is taking root and growing strong from coast to coast and in the heart of our country.

"We have a lot more work to do to protect the relationships and families of LGBT people and people with HIV in other states, and to advance and protect our civil rights on the job, in school, and in all aspects of our lives.

"Today, our thoughts and hearts turn to Iowa. We know there is a long road ahead to protect this victory. We must roll up our sleeves and work with our colleagues at One Iowa to continue to share with Iowans, and the rest of the country, about the importance of marriage equality for our families. But first, we celebrate. Love, justice and history are on our side." ...

Lambda Legal today issued the following statement in response to the tragic suicides of Jaheem Herrera of Dekalb County, Georgia, and Carl Joseph Walker-Hoover, of Springfield, Massachusetts, both 11-year-olds who faced antigay harassment and bullying.

Statement from Kevin Cathcart, Executive Director of Lambda Legal:

“This has been a somber time for everyone who heard the terrible news of two young people taking their own lives after being the targets of antigay physical and emotional abuse. We extend our sincere condolences to the families and loved ones of these young boys.

“The tragic deaths of Jaheem Herrera and Carl Joseph Walker-Hoover underscore the importance of safe schools where harassment and violence based on racist, sexist, antigay or other biased attitudes are not tolerated. Unfortunately, there is much work to be done. Harassment of LGBTQ students and those perceived to be LGBT remains a serious problem across the country. Lambda Legal pledges to continue to stand up for students and hold schools accountable for preserving their rights and integrity. We applaud schools that stand up for safety and respect for all students because any student can be the target of LGBT-related bullying and harassment.

“Lambda Legal has played a key role in securing equality for LGBTQ and allied youth and standing up for their rights in schools. We advocated for students’ rights to an environment of safety and respect in communities from New York and New Jersey to Oregon to California and Georgia. In 1996 we made history with the first legal challenge to antigay violence in public schools on behalf of Jamie Nabozny, in Nabozny v. Podlesny, and in our 2000 case, Colin v. Orange Unified School District, we established the obligation of schools to allow Gay Straight Alliance’s on equal terms with other student activities.

“Every student deserves the right to a respectful and affirming experience in school hallways and classrooms. We owe it to Jaheem Herrera and Carl Joseph Walker-Hoover to make sure that school officials, teachers and fellow students take a stand against LGBT-related harassment every day, and at Lambda Legal we will continue our work in schools to help prevent similar tragedies from occurring.”

Lambda Legal will join the Faith and Community Alliance and other community groups at a vigil for Jaheem Herrera on Tuesday, April 28, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., First Christian Church of Decatur ,601 West Ponce de Leon Ave., Decatur, GA.

(Lambda Legal is a national organization committed to achieving full recognition of the civil rights of lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, transgender people and those with HIV through impact litigation, education and public policy work.)

Human Rights Campaign, Coalition of Groups Launch National Call-in Campaign

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Observer Update) - The Human Rights Campaign, announced a coalition campaign to call Congress in support of the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which would provide local police and sheriff’s departments with federal resources to combat hate violence. After more than a decade of lobbying on Capitol Hill and seven successful votes on the bill, this critical piece of legislation is again expected to see a vote in the House this week. The call-in campaign is set for April 27-29.

“We've received word that the House will vote on the Matthew Shepard Act very soon and we know that right-wing groups are flooding Congress with calls, emails and sickening ‘fact sheets’ full of lies about the lives of LGBT Americans,” said Human Rights Campaign President Joe Solmonese. “We need more calls to Members of Congress, and we need them right away. It has been ten long years and tens of thousands more victims since the Matthew Shepard Act was first introduced in Congress. We are poised for a presidential signature this year but lies from the radical right could easily derail our efforts. We must not allow them to continue to demagogue and distort the truth.”

It takes about 45 seconds. Members of the community are urged to call 202-224-3121. Callers are urged to tell the Member’s office:

• Hate crimes against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people are on the rise. One out of every six hate crimes is because of the victim's sexual orientation.

• Hate crimes have more than one victim. They are intended to create an atmosphere of fear and terrorize entire communities.

• The Matthew Shepard Act targets only violent acts – not speech. It does not tell any clergy member what he or she can or can't preach.

Because there is no federal law mandating states and municipalities to report hate crimes, they are often underreported. However, the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s own statistics, based on voluntary reporting, show that since 1991 over 100,000 hate crime offenses have been reported to the FBI, with 7,624 reported in 2007, the FBI’s most recent reporting period. Violent crimes based on sexual orientation constituted 16.6 percent of all hate crimes in 2007, with 1,265 reported for the year. In addition, while not captured in the federal statistics, transgender Americans too often live in fear of violence.

The LLEHCPA gives the Justice Department the power to investigate and prosecute bias motivated violence where the perpetrator has selected the victim because of the person's actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or disability. It provides the Justice Department with the ability to aid state and local jurisdictions either by lending assistance or, where local authorities are unwilling or unable, by taking the lead in investigations and prosecutions of violent crime resulting in death or serious bodily injury that were motivated by bias. It also makes grants available to state and local communities to combat violent crimes committed by juveniles, train law enforcement officers, or to assist in state and local investigations and prosecutions of bias motivated crimes.

A wide coalition of national organizations has called for the passage of the LLEHCPA legislation. Some of those organizations supporting this legislation include: the National Sheriffs Association; International Association of Chiefs of Police; 26 state Attorneys General; the National District Attorneys Association; the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights; the Anti-Defamation League; the NAACP; the National Council of La Raza; the Presbyterian Church; the Episcopal Church; and the National Disability Rights Network.

To take action to support the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes PreventionAct, please visit: www.FightHateNow.org

Sunday, April 26, 2009

The Banality of Bush White House Evil

By Frank Rich (New York Times columnist via Common Dreams post.)

We don't like our evil to be banal. Ten years after Columbine, it only now may be sinking in that the psychopathic killers were not jock-hating dorks from a "Trench Coat Mafia," or, as ABC News maintained at the time, "part of a dark, underground national phenomenon known as the Gothic movement." In the new best seller "Columbine," the journalist Dave Cullen reaffirms that Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris were instead ordinary American teenagers who worked at the local pizza joint, loved their parents and were popular among their classmates.

On Tuesday, it will be five years since Americans first confronted the photographs from Abu Ghraib on "60 Minutes II." Here, too, we want to cling to myths that quarantine the evil. If our country committed torture, surely it did so to prevent Armageddon, in a patriotic ticking-time-bomb scenario out of "24." If anyone deserves blame, it was only those identified by President Bush as "a few American troops who dishonored our country and disregarded our values": promiscuous, sinister-looking lowlifes like Lynddie England, Charles Graner and the other grunts who were held accountable while the top command got a pass.

We've learned much, much more about America and torture in the past five years. But as Mark Danner recently wrote in The New York Review of Books, for all the revelations, one essential fact remains unchanged: "By no later than the summer of 2004, the American people had before them the basic narrative of how the elected and appointed officials of their government decided to torture prisoners and how they went about it." When the Obama administration said it declassified four new torture memos 10 days ago in part because their contents were already largely public, it was right.

Yet we still shrink from the hardest truths and the bigger picture: that torture was a premeditated policy approved at our government's highest levels; that it was carried out in scenarios that had no resemblance to "24"; that psychologists and physicians were enlisted as collaborators in inflicting pain; and that, in the assessment of reliable sources like the F.B.I. director Robert Mueller, it did not help disrupt any terrorist attacks.

The newly released Justice Department memos, like those before them, were not written by barely schooled misfits like England and Graner. John Yoo, Steven Bradbury and Jay Bybee graduated from the likes of Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Michigan and Brigham Young. They have passed through white-shoe law firms like Covington & Burling, and Sidley Austin.

Judge Bybee's résumé tells us that he has four children and is both a Cubmaster for the Boy Scouts and a youth baseball and basketball coach. He currently occupies a tenured seat on the United States Court of Appeals. As an assistant attorney general, he was the author of the Aug. 1, 2002, memo endorsing in lengthy, prurient detail interrogation "techniques" like "facial slap (insult slap)" and "insects placed in a confinement box."

He proposed using 10 such techniques "in some sort of escalating fashion, culminating with the waterboard, though not necessarily ending with this technique." Waterboarding, the near-drowning favored by Pol Pot and the Spanish Inquisition, was prosecuted by the United States in war-crimes trials after World War II. But Bybee concluded that it "does not, in our view, inflict ‘severe pain or suffering.' "

Still, it's not Bybee's perverted lawyering and pornographic amorality that make his memo worthy of special attention. It merits a closer look because it actually does add something new - and, even after all we've heard, something shocking - to the five-year-old torture narrative. When placed in full context, it's the kind of smoking gun that might free us from the myths and denial that prevent us from reckoning with this ugly chapter in our history.

Bybee's memo was aimed at one particular detainee, Abu Zubaydah, who had been captured some four months earlier, in late March 2002. Zubaydah is portrayed in the memo (as he was publicly by Bush after his capture) as one of the top men in Al Qaeda. But by August this had been proven false. As Ron Suskind reported in his book "The One Percent Doctrine," Zubaydah was identified soon after his capture as a logistics guy, who, in the words of the F.B.I.'s top-ranking Qaeda analyst at the time, Dan Coleman, served as the terrorist group's flight booker and "greeter," like "Joe Louis in the lobby of Caesar's Palace." Zubaydah "knew very little about real operations, or strategy." He showed clinical symptoms of schizophrenia.

By the time Bybee wrote his memo, Zubaydah had been questioned by the F.B.I. and C.I.A. for months and had given what limited information he had. His most valuable contribution was to finger Khalid Shaikh Mohammed as the 9/11 mastermind. But, as Jane Mayer wrote in her book "The Dark Side," even that contribution may have been old news: according to the 9/11 commission, the C.I.A. had already learned about Mohammed during the summer of 2001. In any event, as one of Zubaydah's own F.B.I. questioners, Ali Soufan, wrote in a Times Op-Ed article last Thursday, traditional interrogation methods had worked. Yet Bybee's memo purported that an "increased pressure phase" was required to force Zubaydah to talk.

As soon as Bybee gave the green light, torture followed: Zubaydah was waterboarded at least 83 times in August 2002, according to another of the newly released memos. Unsurprisingly, it appears that no significant intelligence was gained by torturing this mentally ill Qaeda functionary. So why the overkill? Bybee's memo invoked a ticking time bomb: "There is currently a level of ‘chatter' equal to that which preceded the September 11 attacks."

We don't know if there was such unusual "chatter" then, but it's unlikely Zubaydah could have added information if there were. Perhaps some new facts may yet emerge if Dick Cheney succeeds in his unexpected and welcome crusade to declassify documents that he says will exonerate administration interrogation policies. Meanwhile, we do have evidence for an alternative explanation of what motivated Bybee to write his memo that August, thanks to the comprehensive Senate Armed Services Committee report on detainees released last week.

The report found that Maj. Paul Burney, a United States Army psychiatrist assigned to interrogations in Guantánamo Bay that summer of 2002, told Army investigators of another White House imperative: "A large part of the time we were focused on trying to establish a link between Al Qaeda and Iraq and we were not being successful." As higher-ups got more "frustrated" at the inability to prove this connection, the major said, "there was more and more pressure to resort to measures" that might produce that intelligence.

In other words, the ticking time bomb was not another potential Qaeda attack on America but the Bush administration's ticking timetable for selling a war in Iraq; it wanted to pressure Congress to pass a war resolution before the 2002 midterm elections. Bybee's memo was written the week after the then-secret (and subsequently leaked) "Downing Street memo," in which the head of British intelligence informed Tony Blair that the Bush White House was so determined to go to war in Iraq that "the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy." A month after Bybee's memo, on Sept. 8, 2002, Cheney would make his infamous appearance on "Meet the Press," hyping both Saddam's W.M.D.s and the "number of contacts over the years" between Al Qaeda and Iraq. If only 9/11 could somehow be pinned on Iraq, the case for war would be a slamdunk.

But there were no links between 9/11 and Iraq, and the White House knew it. Torture may have been the last hope for coercing such bogus "intelligence" from detainees who would be tempted to say anything to stop the waterboarding.

Last week Bush-Cheney defenders, true to form, dismissed the Senate Armed Services Committee report as "partisan." But as the committee chairman, Carl Levin, told me, the report received unanimous support from its members - John McCain, Lindsey Graham and Joe Lieberman included.

Levin also emphasized the report's accounts of military lawyers who dissented from White House doctrine - only to be disregarded. The Bush administration was "driven," Levin said. By what? "They'd say it was to get more information. But they were desperate to find a link between Al Qaeda and Iraq."

Five years after the Abu Ghraib revelations, we must acknowledge that our government methodically authorized torture and lied about it. But we also must contemplate the possibility that it did so not just out of a sincere, if criminally misguided, desire to "protect" us but also to promote an unnecessary and catastrophic war. Instead of saving us from "another 9/11," torture was a tool in the campaign to falsify and exploit 9/11 so that fearful Americans would be bamboozled into a mission that had nothing to do with Al Qaeda. The lying about Iraq remains the original sin from which flows much of the Bush White House's illegality.

Levin suggests - and I agree - that as additional fact-finding plays out, it's time for the Justice Department to enlist a panel of two or three apolitical outsiders, perhaps retired federal judges, "to review the mass of material" we already have. The fundamental truth is there, as it long has been. The panel can recommend a legal path that will insure accountability for this wholesale betrayal of American values.

President Obama can talk all he wants about not looking back, but this grotesque past is bigger than even he is. It won't vanish into a memory hole any more than Andersonville, World War II internment camps or My Lai. The White House, Congress and politicians of both parties should get out of the way. We don't need another commission. We don't need any Capitol Hill witch hunts. What we must have are fair trials that at long last uphold and reclaim our nation's commitment to the rule of law.

Bea Arthur Dies at 86

LOS ANGELES, CA (Observer Update) - Beatrice Arthur, the tough-talking, bawdy character actress who starred in the classic TV sitcoms Maude and The Golden Girls, died Saturday at her home in Los Angeles. She was 86.

Arthur had been battling cancer and had largely dropped out if the spotlight in recent years, with the exception of the occasional appearance at awards shows and Comedy Central roasts. In recent years, she spoofed Sex & the City, playing Carrie Bradshaw in a TV Land spoof. She also appeared as Larry David's mother of Curb Your Enthusiasm.

The Broadway actress rose to stardom on television as the title character in Maude, Norman Lear’s controversial All in the Family spinoff that featured, among other’s things, television’s first abortion storyline. Maude was a liberal, outspoken, politically vocal woman in her late 40s, early 50s through much of the ’70s, a first for TV at that time.

Arthur went on to star for seven seasons as Dorothy Zbornak in The Golden Girls, a show that tackled many a plot line and was a pioneering program for women of a certain age on television. With the help of Betty White, Rue McClanahan and the late Estelle Getty, Arthur has provided hours upon hours of laughs in reruns on Lifetime and The Hallmark Channel, advocate.com reported.

Arthur picked up an Emmy for each of those shows – and a Tony for her work with Angela Lansbury in Broadway’s Mame. She was again nominated for a Tony in 2003 for her one woman show, Bea Arthur on Broadway. She lost to fellow acid-tongued comedienne Elaine Stritch.

"I knew it would hurt, I just didn't know it would hurt this much,” White told Entertainment Weekly in a statement. “I'm so happy that she received her Lifetime Achievement Award while she was still with us, so she could appreciate that. She was such a big part of my life."

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Historic Ex-Gay Study FAKED

Faked Evidence of ‘Gay Conversion’?

Did Masters & Johnson fake their evidence that they’d successfully “converted” more than 70 percent of men and women who were dissatisfied with their homosexuality? That claim was made in the 1979 book, “Homosexuality in Perspective,” by William Masters and Virginia Johnson. But it’s questioned in Thomas Maier’s new biography of the sexologists, “Masters of Sex," reported John Tierney of the New York Times.

Mr. Maier summarizes his doubts in Scientific American, explaining that doubts about validity of the case studies arose among the staff at the Masters and Johnson clinic before the publication of the 1979 book:

Most staffers never met any of the conversion cases during the study period of 1968 through 1977. . . . Clinic staffer Lynn Strenkofsky, who organized patient schedules during this period, says she never dealt with any conversion cases. Marshall and Peggy Shearer, perhaps the clinic’s most experienced therapy team in the early 1970s, says they never treated homosexuals and heard virtually nothing about conversion therapy.

When the clinic’s top associate, Robert Kolodny, asked to see the files and to hear the tape-recordings of these “storybook” cases, Masters refused to show them to him. Kolodny—who had never seen any conversion cases himself—began to suspect some, if not all, of the conversion cases were not entirely true. When he pressed Masters, it became ever clearer to him that these were at best composite case studies made into single ideal narratives, and at worst they were fabricated.

Eventually Kolodny approached Virginia Johnson privately to express his alarm. She, too, held similar suspicions about Masters’ conversion theory, though publicly she supported him. The prospect of public embarrassment, of being exposed as a fraud, greatly upset Johnson, a self-educated therapist who didn’t have a college degree and depended largely on her husband’s medical expertise.

With Johnson’s approval, Kolodny spoke to their publisher about a delay, but it came too late in the process.”That was a bad book,” Johnson recalled decades later. Johnson said she favored a rewriting and revision of the whole book “to fit within the existing [medical] literature,” and feared that Bill simply didn’t know what he was talking about. At worst, she said, “Bill was being creative in those days” in the compiling of the “gay conversion” case studies.

Does “being creative” mean “making it up”? Dr. Masters continued to defend the evidence until his death, but Mr. Maiers says the success of the “gay conversion” therapy has never been proved.

In Focus: Right Sounds False Alarm On Hate Crimes Legislation

(By the People for the American Way)

Why the controversy over a hate crimes law?

Hate crimes are violent attacks on people who are targeted because of who they are. Thousands of Americans are physically attacked every year because of their race, religion, sexual orientation, gender or gender identity, or disability. These crimes are meant to intimidate entire communities. The Local Law Enforcement Enhancement Act – also known as the federal hate crimes bill – would direct federal resources to help local law enforcement fight violent hate crimes, and would let federal law enforcement step in when locals don’t. Similar legislation passed both houses of Congress with bipartisan support during the last session, but never made it to the president’s desk.

Religious Right leaders are vehemently opposed to federal hate crimes laws in large measure because they resist any legal recognition of LGBT people (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual or Transgender). They know that most Americans support hate-crimes legislation, anti-discrimination laws, and legal protection for gay couples. So they create confusion by portraying these steps toward equality as dire threats to religious liberty. This is part of a larger political strategy by Religious Right leaders to advance their policy goals and mobilize supporters with alarmist claims that Christians in America are on the verge of being jailed for their religious beliefs.

As we have noted before, there’s a dangerously cynical motive at the core of this strategy. It is easier to convince Americans to support discrimination – even to oppose laws designed to discourage violent hate crimes – if you have first convinced them that their gay neighbors want to shut down their church and throw their pastor in jail for reading the Bible.

Let’s look at the lies that are the foundation of the Right’s strategy to defeat hate crimes legislation and put the facts on the table.
What does the Religious Right say about hate crimes legislation?

When hate crimes legislation came before the House of Representatives in 2007, Religious Right leaders went ballistic. Family Research Council President Tony Perkins insisted that its only effect would be “to gag people of faith and conviction who disagree with the homosexual agenda.” Perkins’ ally Bishop Harry Jackson recruited other African American pastors to appear at a press conference and in a newspaper ad claiming that hate crimes legislation would “muzzle” black preachers and deny them the freedom to preach about homosexuality. Rev. Ted Pike of the National Prayer Network called a hate crimes bill “the most dangerous legislation ever to come before Congress.” Not to be outdone, the Traditional Values Coalition’s Andrea Lafferty said “Most Christians might as well rip the pages which condemn homosexuality right out of their Bibles because this bill will make it illegal to publicly express the dictates of their religious beliefs.”

The same combination of misinformation and willful deception is being rolled out this year, led by Tony Perkins and the Family Research Council. One alert to its members on March 31 claimed that a federal hate crimes law “could lead to the criminalization of the biblical view of homosexuality in sermons and elsewhere.” Said Perkins:

“A ‘hate crimes’ law is really a ‘thought crime’ law that punishes a person’s beliefs – part of the Left’s intolerant agenda to silence the voice of Christians and Conservatives in America and eliminate moral restraint.”

Perkins’ messages to activists in March make it clear that the alarmist rhetoric against legislation to fight hate crimes is part of a larger political strategy to convince conservative Christians that President Obama and the Democratic Party are enemies of religion and religious freedom. One note urged activists to “Stop President Obama’s Agenda to Silence Your Beliefs” and another spoke of an “Obama-Pelosi-Reid” agenda as “a blueprint of their dangerous vision of an anti-faith, anti-family vision for America.”

The larger claim that equality is somehow the enemy of religious liberty is also being deployed by right-wing groups in response to recent advances on the marriage equality front. The Right’s distortion of the differences between civil and religious marriage were analyzed in another Right Wing Watch In Focus.
What’s the truth about hate crimes legislation?

It’s pretty simple. The federal hate crimes law doesn’t create something called a “thought” crime or somehow create “special rights” for a particular group of people. It strengthens law enforcement’s ability to fight violent crime – not vigorous debate, not sermons against homosexuality, not hateful speech, not the infamous “God hates fags” protesters, not the spreading of misinformation that thrives on constitutionally protected right-wing television, radio, and blogosphere.

Conservatives often say they want judges to focus on exactly what a law says. Well, here’s exactly what the law says:

"Nothing in this Act, or the amendments made by this Act, shall be construed to prohibit any expressive conduct protected from legal prohibition by, or any activities protected by the free speech or free exercise clauses of, the First Amendment to the Constitution."

Another section of the law makes it clear that federal courts could not rely on evidence of a person’s outlook or statements to convict someone of a hate crime unless those expressions were directly related to the commission of the violent crime in question:

“In a prosecution for an offense under this section, evidence of expression or association of the defendant may not be introduced as substantive evidence at trial, unless the evidence specifically relates to that offense. However, nothing in this section affects the rules of evidence governing the impeachment of a witness."

Could it be any clearer that this has nothing to do with silencing preachers or punishing thoughts, and everything to do with discouraging and prosecuting violent hate crimes?

What about the Religious Right’s horror stories?

Religious Right leaders tell stories that they say back up their claims that hate crimes legislation would threaten their ability to speak out against homosexuality, and that the law would soon lead to pastors being hauled off to jail. A lot of those stories revolve around incidents in other countries. So even if the Right is sticking to the facts regarding those incidents (given the track record, a big “if”), they don’t apply here. None of those countries has the powerful free speech protections that the First Amendment gives Americans – the same First Amendment protections that are strongly endorsed and affirmed by the hate crimes legislation and its supporters.

One story Religious Right leaders like to tell revolves around the arrest of some Repent America protestors at a Philadelphia gay pride rally. This incident has become the stuff of mythology on the right, in part due to ads produced by Repent America in 2007 featuring a couple of grandmothers who were supposedly arrested for sharing the Gospel. The way they tell it, it’s understandable that it would concern people. So it’s worth finding out what really happened.

The kernel of truth under the pile of propaganda is that a group of Repent America activists were in fact arrested while protesting Philadelphia’s OutFest, and a local prosecutor did charge them with violations of several laws, including the state’s hate crimes law. But none of those charges were for “sharing the gospel.” Repent America – and the religious and political leaders who tell the same story – don’t mention that the police in fact were careful to protect their right to protest. The court found that among other things the protesters “blocked access to vendors, and disobeyed direct orders from the police, who were trying to preserve order and keep the peace.”

The First Amendment allows equality advocates to rally, and allows those with a different point of view to protest. But it doesn’t mean that the protesters have the right to disrupt the rally or drown out its speakers. It is universally recognized that public safety officials can place reasonable “time, place, or manner” restrictions on people exercising their First Amendment rights in order to preserve public order and prevent one group from trampling another’s rights. The court, which noted that Repent America did not get a permit for its protest, found that the police applied the law reasonably when the bullhorn-wielding Repent America protesters refused a request to move to another location and instead sat down in the street.

It’s also important to note that the court ruled that the prosecutor’s decision to file charges under the hate crimes law was a misapplication of the law – and charges against the protesters were dismissed. The court affirmed that the hate crimes law did not apply to the protesters’ speech or even to their disruptive behavior and refusal to obey police requests. That’s not exactly the impression you’ll get from listening to Religious Right leaders. It’s also important to note that federal courts rejected Repent America’s claims that the city and Outfest organizers had violated their First Amendment rights.

The Bottom Line

Here’s the bottom line: don’t believe Religious Right leaders who say the hate crimes bill will be used to silence preachers, prosecute people for sharing their religious beliefs, or create a category of “thought crimes.” It’s not true, and their claims don’t hold up under any reasonable scrutiny. The law being considered by Congress has clear, explicit, and unambiguous language that affirms and protects First Amendment guarantees for free speech and religious liberty.

Violent crimes that target people for who they are violate core American values. That’s why federal hate crimes legislation has the overwhelming support of the American people and bipartisan support in Congress.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Frank: Don't Ask, Don't Tell Will Probably Wait Till Next Year

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Observer Update) - Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA)--one of three openly gay House members--says he believes that Democrats will wait until 2010 to attempt a repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell, reported talkingpointsmemo.com.


Not only that, but, according to Roll Call, he thinks that's the right way to go. "I believe we should and will do 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' next year," Frank said. "We haven't done the preliminary work, the preparatory work. It would be a mistake to bring it up without a lot of lobbying and a lot of conversation."


The administration has been walking back its vow to repeal DADT for weeks now, to the great frustration of advocates at Human Rights Campaign and the Servicemember's Legal Defense Networks. Gay rights groups hope the issue will be raised when the Senate considers Defense Secretary Robert Gates' budget proposal next month, and their opponents are preparing for just such a contingency.

Emergency Senate bill saves lesbian couple from deporation

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Observer Update) - A bill introduced on the house floor yesterday by Sen. Diane Feinstein (D-CA) is keeping Jay Mercado, her partner Shirley Tan and their twin 12-year-olds together - at least for now, 365Gay.com reported.

Mercado, an American woman and Tan, her Filipino partner, live in Pacifica, California with their 12-year-old twin sons, both American citizens. Tan had been ordered to appear for deportation on May 10, but the emergency bill will keep the family together at least through 2010.

Federal immigration law does not currently allow LGBT Americans to sponsor their partners.

Activists from around the country, including those from Marriage Equality USA, Out4Immigration, Immigration Equality and Love Exiles, learned about Tan and Mercado’s plight a month ago, and pleaded with elected officials for help. The story national prominence as a feature article in the April 20 edition of People Magazine.

“Those of us who have followed this case closely are overjoyed for this family. But this case highlights the need for Congress to pass the Uniting American Families Act (UAFA) – legislation that has been languishing for 10 years – and would help the estimated 36,000 gay and lesbian Americans in a loving and committed relationship with a foreign partner stay together in the U.S.,” said Amos Lim, co-founder of Out4Immigration.

The Uniting American Families Act (UAFA), re-introduced in February 2009 by Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) would add the words “or permanent partner” to existing immigration law wherever the word “spouse” appears. The Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) prohibits gay and lesbian Americans from accessing equal immigration rights, along with 1,137 other rights that come with a federally recognized marriage. The UAFA currently has 97 co-sponsors in the House and 17 in the Senate. Feinstein is not one of them.

GLBT Murder Victims Remembered at National Equality Rally at Independence Hall

PHILADELPHIA, PA (Observer Update) - The Gay American Heroes Foundation will participate in the National Equality Rally at Independence Hall, preceded by The March for Equality on Independence Mall on Sunday, May 3. Gay American Heroes honors members of the LGBT community who have been murdered because of their sexual orientation or gender identity.

Fifty members of PFLAG (Parents, Families & Friends of Lesbians and Gays) will March for Equality on Independence Mall carrying enlarged photos of LGBT murder victims of hate crimes provided by the Gay American Heroes Foundation.

"It's time to show the world our HEROES. Our family and friends are being stolen from us because of hate and those who teach it," said Scott Hall, Founder, Gay American Heroes Foundation.

“The March for Equality on Independence Mall followed by the National Equality Rally at Independence Hall could be the largest Equality rally in the nation in 2009,” stated Malcolm Lazin, Executive Director, Equality Forum.

Gay Pioneers Frank Kameny and Lilli Vincenz will lead grassroots activists, organizations, and straight allies in the March for Equality on Independence Mall. The national Lesbian and Gay Band Association (LGBA), which marched in President Obama's Inaugural Parade, will perform. Over 100 organizations from across the nation will March for Equality on Independence Mall.

For a complete list of National Equality Rally Co-Organizers and to find out how to participate, visit www.nationalequalityrally.org.

Equality Forum is a national and international GLBT civil rights organization with an educational focus. The National Equality Rally at Independence Hall will be held on the concluding day of Equality Forum 2009 (April 27 to May 3), the largest and premiere annual national and international GLBT civil rights forum. There is no registration fee and all panels are free. For information about Equality Forum, visit www.equalityforum.com.

Social Security Administration to Provide Benefits in Lambda Legal Case Representing Gay Father’s Children

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Observer Update) - In a letter received today, the Social Security Administration (SSA) reversed its prior determination to deny benefits to the children of a disabled gay father in Lambda Legal’s case representing the family against apparent anti gay discrimination by the federal government.

"This is long awaited relief for Gary Day and his children, who just want to be respected as the family that they are," said Beth Littrell, Staff Attorney at Lambda Legal’s Southern Regional Office based in Atlanta. "The Social Security Administration is supposed to provide families with help in a time of need regardless of a parent’s sexual orientation. After three long years and a federal lawsuit, the SSA has finally come through for these children."

In February of 2006, Day completed the applications for Child Insurance Benefits for his children. He provided birth certificates and court documents that acknowledge him as a legal parent of the children. The SSA acknowledged that they received the application and promised to provide a response in 45 days.

After more than a year with no response, Lambda Legal sent a letter on Day's behalf seeking action by the agency. The SSA still did not provide an initial determination of eligibility citing unspecified "legal questions and policy issues" involved with the application. Day provided all the necessary documentation to establish a legitimate parent-child relationship and fulfilled all of the SSA's prerequisites, yet his family was left without the social safety net that Day had paid into for decades and that all other families are provided on a regular basis.

In May 2008, Lambda Legal, along with co-counsel from McDermott Will & Emery LLP, filed suit against the SSA compelling the agency to act on Day’s application and urging the SSA to recognize Day as a legal parent of the children. Today’s letter recognizes the legal relationship between Day and his children without discrimination based on his sexual orientation or family status.

"As a parent, it is my job to provide for my children. I am relieved to be able to fulfill my promise and also relieved that the SSA will provide the benefits my family needs, just as they do for other families."

"This case has always been about the welfare of Mr. Day’s children and protecting them from discrimination. We are pleased that the Social Security Administration finally realized that these children, like all children of individuals entitled to disability benefits, have legal rights to Government assistance. The sexual orientation of their parents is and should be irrelevant to such a determination," said co-counsel Lisa A. Linsky.

Beth Littrell, Staff Attorney, is Lambda Legal's lead attorney on this case, Gary Day v Social Security Administration. Lisa A. Linsky, Amy Beard and Betsy Philpott, of the law firm McDermott Will & Emery, LLP., are co-counsel with Lambda Legal on the case.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Wingspan Cuts Gay West Ticket Price - 2-for-1

TUCSON - Bring a friend to Gay West! Buy one regular admission ticket and get one free! Special pricing available for $15 Advance tickets at Wingspan (425 E 7th St., Tucson) and Antigone Books (411 N 4th Ave, Tucson) through Friday, April 24. The special also applies to $18 tickets purchased at the Gate.

WHAT: GAY WEST 2009, a benefit for Wingspan

WHO: Neil Giuliano, president of GLAAD and the former mayor Tempe

Ruthie and Connie, activists featured in the documentary "Every Room in the House"

Lady Bunny, founder of Wigstock and internationally-known Drag Diva

Lucinda Holliday, Tucson's inimitable Queen of Drag


WHEN: Saturday, April 25, 6:00pm – 12:00 am

WHERE: Old Tucson Studios, 201 South Kinney Road, Tucson.

Gay West 2009 is bigger, better, and cooler than ever, with an entertainment lineup that features outrageous drag shows by two female impersonator icons: New York City's nationally-recognized Lady Bunny, and Tucson's own inimitable Lucinda Holliday.

The lineup also includes Old Tucson Studios' stunt shows, 'Hypno' Joe, a Hi NRG Dance Saloon, mechanical bull riding, great food and drinks, and much more!

"For over 20 years, Wingspan has been providing opportunities for Southern Arizona's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community to come together and rejoice in all its glorious diversity," said Jason Cianciotto, executive director, Wingspan. "Gay West 2009 will be bigger, better, and cooler than ever as we celebrate with our community at Old Tucson Studios."

The Entertainment -

Lady Bunny

Lucinda Holliday

Ajia Simone

Hi-NRG Dance Saloon

Rope-a-Steer

Can-Can Show

Haunted Mine Tour

Drag Quick-Draw

Mechanical Bull Riding

Carousel

Sumo Wrestling

Old Tucson Stunt Show

Hypno Joe

Roller Coaster Simulator

Shooting Gallery

Political Update - By Mark R. Kerr

As previously reported, H.R. 1913, the “Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009,” which if approved, would expand current federal statutes on hate crimes to include sexual orientation or gender identity, perceived or otherwise, had been introduced in this Congress and assigned to the House Judiciary Committee for consideration.

The House Judiciary Committee has “marked up” H.R. 1913 and was voted on by the full committee, giving the measure its first legislative victory. . . .

Meanwhile on Capitol Hill, in the wake of the Vermont’s Legislature approving the recognition of same-sex marriages and the Iowa Supreme Court decision on the same matter, efforts are ongoing to repeal sections of the Federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which prohibit the federal legal and governmental recognition of such committed relationships.

According to accounts, a handful of congressional leaders have been hashing out the details of the legislation, which would accomplish two goals: repeal section 3 of DOMA as it relates to the federal government's ability to confer some 1,100 federal benefits on same-sex partners; and provide a way for same-sex couples living in states that do not allow them to marry legally to access the same federal benefits afforded to heterosexual spouses. Section 2 of DOMA would remain in place, defining marriage as between a “man and a woman.” . .

U.S. Representative Jared Polis, D-CO, is considering drafting a federal omnibus measure that would deal with many issues of concern to the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender community.

In interviews, Representative Polis, one of three openly LGBT members of the U.S. House of Representatives, said his proposed legislation could cover areas dealing with hate crimes, “don’t ask, don’t tell,” and employment non-discrimination, to name three potential topics of his measure. . . .

Back in the Grand Canyon State, Arizona’s accidental Governor Jan Brewer, this past week asked the federal government for funding . . . for the state’s failed abstinence program, to the tune of $1-million, despite the poor tracking record for the program, since in 2007, the most recent statistics available, there were 12,972 births to teen mothers, defined as 19 or younger. Of that total, nearly 87 percent of the teens were not married.

Wonderful, the accidental governor asks for money for “Just Say No, No, No,” but when it comes to the federal stimulus money, what has Jan done?

Nothing, since signing her “Super Bowl” budget, she hasn’t lifted a finger to get Arizona’s Legislature to change the funding and guideline rules for education and Arizona’s health care program which has put the state’s money, close to $800 million on hold because of the Republican’s screw up.

Speaking of screw-ups, this week, specifically Saturday, April 25, will mark the 100th day, the first session of the 49th Arizona Legislature will be operating - the usual date, the Republican leadership of each chamber has blathered on, time and time again, that they would have their “open and transparent” business completed.

As in time past, they haven’t, costing the taxpayers to the tune of $63,000 a day to operate, while the Republican’s play whose truck in bigger on non-issues dealing with state sovereignty, guns in bars and Rio Nuevo, in an effort to change the subject away from their incompetence.

So to hear those sweet words, “Sine Die,” will be such a welcome relief but it’s a tune that is far off the horizon, like the state’s recovery thanks to the elephantine efforts of the Arizona Republican Legislative Leadership.

For those conservative readers and money-grubbing fiends, how many of those individuals who support the concept of a flat-tax, actually follow through by using the federal and state EZ income tax forms?

Human Rights Campaign Praises Washington State for Adding Gender Identity and Expression to Hate Crimes Laws

OLYMPIA, Washington - The Human Rights Campaign praised Governor Christine Gregoire and the Washington State legislature for adding gender identity and expression to the state’s hate crimes laws. Governor Gregoire signed the bill today following positive votes in the legislature. On April 8, the state House of Representatives voted 68-30 to pass SB 5952 following a Senate vote of 36-12 on March 10. Passage came with bipartisan support from both Democrats and Republicans.

“We applaud Washington State for updating existing hate crimes laws to include protections for gender identity and expression,” said Human Rights Campaign President Joe Solmonese. “We congratulate Senator Joe McDermott for his leadership in sponsoring this bill, as well as Equal Rights Washington, the Washington Student Lobby,and the many activists, including HRC members, who have been working to build support for this bill. We’re pleased that so many legislators, Democrats and Republicans, recognize that this is simply about equal protection under the law.”

“Today is a great day for the state of Washington and all Washingtonians,” said Allyson Robinson, Associate Director for Diversity at the Human Rights Campaign. “This legislation will finally provide protections to our transgender brothers and sisters who are often the targets of the most violent acts of hate. Washington has taken a big leap forward in recognizing the importance of this common-sense legislation.”

Andrade Guilty of Murder; Sentenced to Life

Allen Andrade was found guilty on Wednesday of first-degree murder for beating 18-year-old transgender woman Angie Zapata to death, reported advocate.com.

Prosecutors billed Andrade, 32, as a homophobe who aimed to kill Zapata after they met on a gay-related dating site. While Andrade's attorneys argued that the murder was a pure reaction to finding out that Zapata was transgender, evidence shows that she was up-front with Andrade about living as a woman.

"Someone living like that needs to be held accountable," he allegedly said to his girlfriend at the time.

Zapata and Andrade spent nearly three days together before the murder. The two also exchanged nearly 700 text messages in the days leading up to her death.

"The only time he showed any emotion is when he was talking about homosexuals," prosecutor Robb Miller said. "He even has the audacity to say he wants to sell his story to the press for $55,000."

The case drew wide national attention because it was believed to be the first to charge a suspect with murder as a hate crime against someone for their gender identity. Such hate-crime amendments do not exist on the federal level, but states like Colorado have those protections.

Andrade faces a mandatory life sentence without parole.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

In Memorium: Bob Boggiano

Robert James Boggiano, 47, of Tucson and formerly Grand Rapids, Mich., died Saturday evening April 18 at his home.

Known as Bob to his family and friends, he moved to Tucson with his partner Andrew Sauer in 2004 and began operating Great Lakes Painting and Design, a custom interior painting company that he and Andrew formed in Michigan.

In addition to Andrew, he is survived by his sons, James Jackson Boggiano and Cory Allen Boggiano of Grand Rapids, his mother Jane Drumm of Grand Rapids, his sister Shari Lewis of Michigan, his brother, Mark Boggiano of Grand Rapids, his grandmother Gladys Herrick, who lives with his great-aunt, Doris Johns, in Grand Rapids, and Andrew’s parents, Jack and Suzanne Sauer of Tucson and Grand Rapids.

A viewing service will be held from 4 to 7 p.m. Friday April 17 at Bring Funeral Home, 6910 E. Broadway, Tucson, with a wake to follow at his home.

He graduated from Grand Rapids’ Kelloggsville High School in 1981. He became a co-owner of the deli Bo-Jack’s in Grand Rapids and a family-style restaurant C.J.’s Kitchen in Kalamazoo, Mich., that one reviewer commented was a “really excellent truck stop”. It wasn’t a truck stop. Andrew said the description caught both by surprise, but after reflection seemed to represent the spirit of the enterprise.

To Bob’s friends, his spirit shined in the zeal for his work, his compassion for all, and for the excellence of his word. As Andrew said, “He was just a good guy.”

People Living With HIV Still Refused Entry to USA, Warns UK Gay Health Group

LONDON, April 20, 2009 – Gay men living with HIV remain banned from travelling to the USA unless they have specifically applied for a visa to do so, HIV and sexual health charity Terrence Higgins Trust (THT) warned today, ukgaynews.org reported.

Despite the recent introduction of an online visa waiver system (ESTA), people with HIV still need to attend an interview at the American Embassy in London before they can travel legally.

THT’s telephone helpline, THT Direct, has recently received calls from people living with HIV who have tried to enter the country by using the online ESTA system, which is an electronic version of the visa waiver process.

In some cases, these people have reached the US border only to be refused entry by immigration control and turned back to the UK, incurring substantial travel costs.

Currently, people with HIV are permanently excluded from the United States except in exceptional circumstances.

Following new legislation passed by the US Congress last year, the HIV entry ban is no longer law, but remains an administrative decision to be ruled on by the Department for Health and Human Services.

THT continues to lobby for the complete lifting of the ban, which it includes as a priority in its policy document ‘25 things the Government can do’. 

“While we are pleased that the US Government intend to revisit their entry regulations,it has not happened yet,” Lisa Power, head of policy at THT said this morning.

People with HIV shouldn’t jump the gun by assuming it’s already okay to travel to the US without a special visa.

“Everyone entering the US is still required to state that they have no transmissible conditions, alongside not being a terrorist, a Nazi or a criminal,” she warned.

“People who don’t get the special visa but then disclose their status on entry run the risk of being forcibly deported and banned from entering the US again, so please be aware of the rules before you fly.”

Iraqi militias gluing anuses of gay men and inducing diarrhea to cause death.

(H/T Think Progress)

Relying on an International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission translation of a recent Al Arabiya story, the blog Towleroad reports that Iraqi militias have been engaging in some particularly brutal tactics toward gay men in Iraq: 

"A prominent Iraqi human rights activist says that Iraqi militia have deployed a painful form of torture against homosexuals by closing their anuses using 'Iranian gum.' ...Yina Mohammad told Alarabiya.net that, 'Iraqi militias have deployed an unprecedented form of torture against homosexuals by using a very strong glue that will close their anus.' According to her, the new substance 'is known as the American hum, which is an Iranian-manufactured glue that if applied to the skin, sticks to it and can only be removed by surgery. After they glue the anuses of homosexuals, they give them a drink that causes diarrhea. Since the anus is closed, the diarrhea causes death. Videos of this form of torture are being distributed on mobile cellphones in Iraq.'"

The Iraqi defense ministry reported earlier this month that six gay men were shot dead in a Shia-controlled part of Baghadad. "Two of the bodies, found on Thursday, had pieces of paper attached on which was written the word 'Pervert.'" According to the source in the Al Arabiya article, "for the past 3 weeks a crackdown on homosexuals has been going on based on a religious decree that demands their death; dozens have been targeted." The persecution "is not confined to the Shiite clerics," the source said. "Some Sunni leaders have also declared the death penalty for sodomy on satellite channels."


Rudy The Adultering Thrice Married Yahoo Defending Marriage? Oh Get Her!

Stand Up Against Hate

Monday, April 20, 2009

TAKE ACTION: Tell Congress To Hold Impeachment Hearings Against Judge Jay Bybee


Last week, President Obama released four Bush-era legal memos authorizing torture. The earliest one, from 2002, was signed by Jay Bybee, then an Assistant Attorney General and now a federal judge on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. In the memo, Bybee authorized CIA interrogators to, among other techniques:

-- Slam a detainee's head against a wall: "any pain experienced is not of the intensity associated with serious physical injury."

-- Slap a detainee's face: "The facial slap does not produce pain that is difficult to endure."

-- Place a detainee into stress positions: "They simply involve forcing the subject to remain in uncomfortable positions."

-- Waterboard a detainee: "The waterboard...inflicts no pain or actual harm whatsoever."

These techniques are illegal by U.S. statute and international treaty to which the U.S. is a signatory. Bybee attempted to give legal cover to illegal acts, and thus broke the ethical, professional, and legal standards that should govern lawyers. For this, Judge Jay Bybee should be impeached. Congress needs to assert some accountability for these heinous acts.

ThinkProgress is sending a petition to the members of the House Judiciary Committee -- where impeachment articles are drawn -- imploring them to act now to remove Bybee from public office. Please join our efforts by signing onto our campaign. Here's how it could work:

Step One: Hearings. The House Judiciary Committee holds hearings to examine charges against Bybee.

Step Two: Articles of Impeachment. The House Judiciary Committee draws up the articles of impeachment and presents them to the full House with a simple majority vote.

Step Three: Passes the House. The full House moves to impeach Bybee with a simple majority, and then passes a resolution notifying the Senate

Step Four: Moves to the Senate. The Senate passes a resolution indicating its readiness to receive the House "managers" -- in effect, the prosecutors -- and to hear the full articles of impeachment.

Step Five: Trial. 51 Senators must vote to continue with the impeachment trial, and 67, a full two-thirds majority, are required to convict.

An impeachment hearing would require full answers from Bybee -- and would give the American people the answers they deserve. When Bush nominated Bybee in 2003, Congress had no knowledge of the full scope of Bybee's legalese somersaults to make torture appear legal. When asked, he refused to comment, citing executive privilege. Now we know how integral Bybee was to initiating Bush's years-long torture program.

Today, Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-NY), a senior member on the House Judiciary Committee, endorsed impeaching Bybee. "He ought to be impeached," Nadler told the Huffington Post. "It was not an honest legal memo. It was an instruction manual on how to break the law."

Jay Bybee has neither the legal nor the moral authority to sit in judgment of others. Please sign our petition.


(H/T Think Progress)

Around the Old Pueblo

Reveille's Make em Laugh Opens Friday, more information at Reveille's Website.

Mamma Mia in Tucson, April 21 - 26. Visit Broadway in Tucson for more details.

Gay West on Saturday April 25. Have you gotten your tickets yet?

The City of Tucson GLBT Commission seeking interested persons to serve, details online here.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Gay West 2009, April 25

TUCSON (Observer Update) - BREAKING NEWS! Now UA and PCC Students get 2-for1 tix with valid I.D. at the Gate!

Tickets are available at Wingspan, Antigone Books* and online at www.gaywest2009.com!

It's going to be bigger, better and cooler than ever before. Join us at Old Tucson Studios as we honor Neil Giuliano and Ruthie & Connie with the 2009 GayWest Humanitarian Awards, and then enjoy entertainment from Lady Bunny, Lucinda Holliday and a whole host of Tucson's best talent.

Cop Investigated for threatening rainbow flag carriers

CASA GRANDE (Observer Update) - A Casa Grande police officer is under investigation after allegedly threatening to arrest a group of gay demonstrators for carrying a rainbow flag within city limits, reported 365Gay.com.

The small group of demonstrators on Wednesday was protesting US tax law, which does not allow same-sex couples to file joint returns. The group said the federal Defense of Marriage law forces gay couples to pay higher taxes than married couples do.

The police officer was apparently called by a driver complaining that the 8 foot by 5 foot flag had obstructed his view of traffic.

Protest organizer Christopher Hall told The Arizona Republic that the protesters were well behaved.

“I was upset more than anything and confused as to what was the problem,” said Hall the president of Central Arizona Rainbow Equality.

Hall said that he checked with city officials before holding the demonstration and the protesters were abiding by a requirement they be at least seven feet from the sidewalk.

Hall said that the the officer asked for their identification and the protesters complied. They were then told they could not fly the flag “anywhere” in the city limits or they would risk arrest.

“This was wrong,” Hall told The Republic. “They’ve actually violated, in my opinion, First Amendment rights.”

Hall said the group has filed a complaint with police, and that he has a meeting with Police Chief Robert Huddleston on Monday.

“The Casa Grande Police Department will continue to work with this and any other citizen group to respect their right to assemble and demonstrate in a safe manner.,” Huddleston said in a statement. “We apologize for any inconvenience or misunderstanding, and look forward to the completion of the investigation.”

Saturday, April 18, 2009

ACLU Demands Tennessee Schools Stop Censoring Gay Educational Websites

NASHVILLE, TN (Observer Update) - As many as 107 Tennessee public school districts could be illegally preventing students from accessing online information about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender issues, according to a letter to sent to school officials by the American Civil Liberties Union. The letter demands that Knox County Schools, Metro Nashville Public Schools, and the Tennessee Schools Cooperative unblock the Internet filtering category designated “LGBT” so that students can access political and educational information about LGBT issues on school computers.

“When I found out about this web filtering software, I wasn’t looking for anything sexual or inappropriate – I was looking for information about scholarships for LGBT students, and I couldn’t get to it because of this software,” said Andrew Emitt, a 17-year-old senior at Central High School in Knoxville. “Our schools shouldn’t be keeping students in the dark about LGBT organizations and resources.”

In its letter, the ACLU gives the districts and the Tennessee Schools Cooperative until April 29 to come up with a plan to restore access to the LGBT sites or any other category that blocks non-sexual websites advocating the fair treatment of LGBT people by the beginning of the 2009-2010 school year. If that deadline is not met, the ACLU will file a lawsuit.

“Students at Knox County and Metro Nashville schools are being denied access to content that is protected speech under the First Amendment as well as the Tennessee state constitution,” said Tricia Herzfeld, Staff Attorney with the ACLU of Tennessee. “This kind of censorship does nothing but hurt students, whether they’re being harassed at school and want to know about their legal rights or are just trying to finish an assignment for a class.”

The Internet filtering software used by Knox County and Metro Nashville school districts blocks student access to the websites of many well-known national LGBT organizations, including:

Parents, Families, and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG)
The Gay Lesbian Straight Education Network (GLSEN)
Human Rights Campaign (HRC)
Marriage Equality USA
Religious Coalition for the Freedom to Marry
The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD)
Dignity USA (an organization for LGBT Catholics)
In its demand letter, the ACLU notes that websites that urge LGBT persons to change their sexual orientation or gender identity through so-called “reparative therapy” or “ex-gay” ministries – a practice denounced as dangerous and harmful to young people by such groups as the American Psychological Association, the American Psychiatric Association, the American Medical Association, and the American Academy of Pediatrics – can still be easily accessed by students.

“One of the problems with this software is that it only allows students access to one side of information about topics that are part of the public debate right now, like marriage for same-sex couples,” said Karyn Storts-Brinks, a librarian at Fulton High School in Knoxville, pointing out that the software blocks access to organizations that support marriage for same-sex couples like the Religious Coalition for Freedom to Marry or the Interfaith Working Group while allowing access to organizations that oppose marriage equality. “Students who need to do research for assignments on current events can only get one viewpoint, keeping them from being able to cover both sides of the issue. That’s not fair and can hinder their schoolwork.”

“Public schools are supposed to be a place where students learn from the open exchange of ideas,” said Eric Austin, a senior at Hume-Fogg High School in Nashville, which also uses the filtering software. “How are we supposed to be informed citizens and learn how to have respectful debate when our schools rule out an entire category of information for no good reason?”

No federal or state law requires school districts to block access to LGBT sites. Tennessee law, Tenn. Code § 49-1-221, only requires schools to implement filtering software to restrict information that is obscene or harmful to minors. About 80 percent of Tennessee public schools, including those in the Knox County and Metro Nashville districts, use filtering software provided by Education Networks of America (ENA), and the software’s default setting blocks sites ENA categorizes as LGBT. The ACLU believes that most of the 107 Tennessee school districts that use ENA’s filtering software keep the LGBT category blocked. ENA blocks access to a wide category of “LGBT” sites described on the organization’s website as

Sites that provide information regarding, support, promote, or cater to one's sexual orientation or gender identity including but not limited to lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, and transgender sites. This category does not include sites that are sexually gratuitous in nature which would typically fall under the Pornography category. Examples: glsen.org, gsanetwork.org, hrc.org
“When public schools only allow access to one side of an issue by blocking certain websites, they’re engaging in illegal viewpoint discrimination,” said Hedy Weinberg, Executive Director of the ACLU of Tennessee. “Over a hundred other school districts in Tennessee use the same filtering software used in Metro Nashville and Knox County, and we’re eager to find out whether any of those systems are also violating students’ Constitutional rights by restricting access to LGBT sites.”

Tennessee students, teachers, or school librarians whose schools use the ENA web filtering software and find that their access to LGBT websites is restricted are encouraged to contact the ACLU of Tennessee by phone at 615-320-7142 or by email at aclutn@aclu-tn.org.

Austin, Emitt, and Storts-Brinks are represented by Herzfeld, Chris Hansen and Catherine Crump of the ACLU First Amendment Working Group, and Christine Sun of the ACLU LGBT Project.

A copy of the ACLU’s demand letter is available at http://www.aclu.org/lgbt/youth/39346res20090413.html.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Day of Silence observed

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Observer Update) - Hundreds of thousands of students at thousands of schools nationwide are taking part in the National Day of Silence to bring attention to anti-LGBT name-calling, bullying and harassment.

Students from more than 8,000 middle schools, high schools and colleges registered as participants in last year’s Day of Silence. This year the number is expected to be higher.

Students typically participate by remaining silent throughout the school day, unless asked to participate in class.

The Day of Silence was created by University of Virginia students in 1996 and became a national event in 1997. The Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network became the national sponsor in 2001.

To bring attention to this problem of anti-LGBT bullying, many students will hand out speaking cards on the Day of Silence, which read: “Please understand my reasons for not speaking today. I am participating in the Day of Silence (DOS), a national youth movement bringing attention to the silence faced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people and their allies. My deliberate silence echoes that silence, which is caused by anti-LGBT bullying, name-calling and harassment. I believe that ending the silence is the first step toward building awareness and making a commitment to address these injustices. Think about the voices you are not hearing today.”

Some students are holding the day this year in memory of Carl Walker-Hoover, an 11-year-old from Springfield, Mass., who took his life April 6 after enduring constant bullying at school, including anti-LGBT attacks. Carl, who did not identify as gay, would have turned 12 today.

It was at least the fourth suicide of a middle-school aged child linked to bullying, the GLSEN said.

Earlier this month, the parents of a Mentor, Ohio, high school student filed a federal lawsuit in connection with their son’s suicide.

Mohat, 17, went home from school on March 27, 2007, put a gun to his head and pulled the trigger.

In a federal lawsuit, the parents of Eric Mohat allege that he regularly “was called ‘gay,’ ‘fag,’ ‘queer’ and ‘homo’ among other names” and that the school did nothing to prevent it.

A 2007 study by GLSEN of more than 6,000 LGBT students found that nearly nine out of 10 LGBT youth reported being verbally harassed at school in the past year because of their sexual orientation, nearly half reported being physically harassed and about a quarter reported being physically assaulted.

“The Day of Silence is a positive event during which students bring attention to the pervasive problem of anti-LGBT bullying in our nation’s schools, a problem far too often ignored,” GLSEN Executive Director Eliza Byard said. “It is inspiring to see so many young people take action to make their schools safer.”

But some students will not hear the silent message.

A coalition of conservative Christian groups is calling on parents to pull their children out of school today.

The coalition is made up of organizations that have a national history of opposing LGBT civil rights and includes The American Family Association, Campaign for Children and Families, Concerned Women for America, Liberty Council, and Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays, reported 365Gay.com.

“The implicit purpose of the Day of Silence is to undermine the belief that homosexuality is immoral,” the groups said in a joint statement. “It is the belief of the sponsors of the Walkout that parents should no longer passively accept the political usurpation of taxpayer- funded public school classrooms through student silence.”

Many of the same groups are involved in a national protest day which they call “The Day of Truth” as a response to the Day of Silence, and school districts which bar counter demonstrations are being threatened with lawsuits. It is scheduled to take place Monday April 20.