A long-overdue Bent Alaska update — October 2013

Bent Alaska in the sunby Melissa S. (Mel) Green
Bent Alaska editor

It’s been nearly a year since I posted “A word from our editor” announcing that Bent Alaska (the blog) would be going into semi-hiatus for a month so that I could return to my own writing.

It turns out that “semi-hiatus” has lasted for far longer, & has been less a semi than full hiatus. And it’s come time to make a complete statement about what is happening, or not, with Bent Alaska.

In short:

  • Bent Alaska the blog will continue to be in hiatus indefinitely;
  • The Bent Alaska Group on Facebook, founded in February 2013 as a place for Alaska’s LGBTQA community to share news, information, events, and discussion (replacing Bent’s “personal” wall in that role) has grown to over 1600 members. The transition to a “group” model for sharing our news with each other is complete, and we count it a success. The group is thriving, and will continue to thrive.
  • Chris ConstantChristopher Constant has been doing yeoman’s work as an unacknowledged administrator of the Bent Alaska Facebook group since June. It’s time now to publicly announce Chris as co-administrator of Bent Alaska in general and of the Bent Alaska Group on Facebook in particular.

That was the short version. Now for the long:

A personal statement

Melissa S. (Mel) GreenI joined Bent Alaska as co-administrator in February 2011, after already having acted as temporary editor a couple of times when Bent’s founding editor, E. Ross, was away. In October 2011, E. Ross left Alaska, and I became Bent Alaska’s sole editor. I agreed to take on this job out of a desire to keep alive what E. Ross has single-handedly turned Bent Alaska into: arguably the most important single source of news and event information for Alaska’s LGBT community.

But from the beginning both E. Ross and I knew that keeping the Bent Alaska blog going would be contingent on getting additional people to help. In fact, a number of people came forward to help with blog posts or behind-the-scenes assistance and support — thank you! — and we also got some unexpected and very welcome financial support from the Last Frontier Drag Kings — thanks again! But as valuable as this help was, no one in the end was able to make an ongoing commitment to share responsibilities as a full co-editor or administrator. I was still effectively shouldering the burden alone.

After three years of extensive public involvement as a blogger and researcher — starting in April 2009 on my own blog Henkimaa.com with Palin’s nomination of Wayne Anthony Ross as Alaska attorney general and continuing with the Anchorage equal rights ordinance AO-64 in summer 2009; a year and a half’s work on the Anchorage LGBT Discrimination Survey (2010–2012); the Anchorage Baptist Temple housing tax issue; the Andrew Caleb Pritt fiasco; the One Anchorage/Prop 5 campaign; the botched April 2012 Anchorage election and May 2012  recount; two tragic deaths in our community, James Crump at Pride 2011 and Mya Dale by suicide in June 2012; and other events and issues I wrote about in that time — by the end of October last year I was feeling pretty comprehensively burnt out.

When I wrote “A word from our editor” on October 31, 2012, announcing a one-month “semi-hiatus,” I fully intended to return to blogging that December. It didn’t happen; nor did I fulfill my intent to come out of hiatus in February 2013 (as posted on Bent’s FB wall). I had underestimated the extent of my burnout, which had reached a level such that I’ve found it difficult to even visit the Bent Alaska FB group or otherwise conduct any of Bent Alaska’s other work — such as writing this long-overdue post. Burnout is one of those things that puts me into what I’ve termed the cave — not necessarily a bad place, but one from which I have little desire or ability to communicate a whole heck of a lot.

In the meanwhile, I’ve been able to return to my own writing and my own life, and have a better and more fulfilling focus on my day job than I’d had in awhile. I’m feeling happier than I’ve felt in years. The lesson once learned, learned again: there’s only one life I know for certain that I get to live — the one I’m in now. Better take care of it.

After wrestling for some time with what my obligations are, exactly, with regard to Bent Alaska, I’ve come to the conclusion that it is simply unsustainable for one person with a full-time job, who also has important personal-time pursuits (such as my writing, such as my life), to keep up a blog like Bent Alaska all by oneself. An important realization for me — as I have a tendency to guilt-trip myself over responsibilities that, very often, no one has laid on me except myself.

So, again:

Bent Alaska the blog will continue to be in hiatus indefinitely —

— until, if and when, we can find a model for it that doesn’t require one unpaid person to shoulder the vast majority of the work by herself. I will continue to keep the Bent Alaska site with all its content live and available on the web. Bent Alaska has documented much of the experience of the Alaska LGBT community for four-and-a-half years, from March 2008 to October 2012 — a pretty hefty chunk of time.

Bent Alaska Group on Facebook is now the center of Bent Alaska’s internet presence

Bent Alaska's flag icon is based on the Alaska Pride flag designed by Stephen GingrichIn February 2013, Bent Alaska Group replaced Bent Alaska’s (individual) Facebook wall as the place to share your LGBTQIA-related news, event announcements, & discussion. This made it possible for community members to share their own news/event information, instead of having to wait for Bent to share it on their behalf. It’s been working, and the group is thriving, currently with over 1600 members. More information about the group, and the minimal rules governing participation in it, can be found on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/groups/bentalaskagroup/.

Bent Alaska is happy to announce Christopher Constant as co-administrator

Chris ConstantChris has already been doing the job without official acknowledgment since June 2013 — for which I can’t thank him enough, as I’ve felt (due to burnout) incapable of even checking in on the group. Thank you, Chris! Chris has also been an occasional contributor of Bent Alaska blog posts, a behind-the-scenes stalwart, and a friend at least since early 2010. Chris is happy to have people contact him publicly or privately via Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/akconstant.

(See also Bent Alaska’s wall at https://www.facebook.com/bent.alaska — but please don’t post events/info there: use the group for that.)

Finally…

Now that I’ve finally written this long-overdue post, I am likely to check in (and help) a little more often in the Bent Alaska group, and elsewhere. But my focus will be on doing what I need to do: my life and my writing. If you’re interested in that, you can find me on my personal blog at Henkimaa.com. You can also find me on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/yksin.

Thanks to all of those who have contributed blog posts, financial support, and behind-the-scenes support over the past few years. Thanks also to the Alaska LGBTQ community, and all our allies and friends, for your patience, understanding, and support. You’ve made it all worthwhile.

Melissa S. (Mel) Green
Bent Alaska editor

Equality Now

Photo credits: Photos of Christopher Constant by Jeanne Devon of The Mudflats. Other photos by Melissa S. Green.

Dance in the Streets and Increase the Beat: New Steps Forward for Pridefest 2013

[Written by Heather Aronno – Originally published at the Alaska Commons on June 7, 2013]

On the eve of the beginning of Alaska Pridefest, Anne Marie Moylan is one proud mama. Her daughter, Kate Lanier-Moylan, was just awarded a scholarship from the Pride Foundation, along with Christopher Dietrich. Pride Foundation is a philanthropic organization that lends support to LGBT causes in the northwestern part of the Lower 48 and Alaska. Moylan is also proud of the work she’s put in to this year’s Pridefest, along with her three co-chairs, or as they call themselves: quad-chairs.

Pridefest is an annual event comprising a week of activities for families, youth, elders, and everyone in between. Festivities begin this year with the Town Square Kick-Off, a family-friendly celebration featuring live music by Agents of Karma.

Representatives from every Pridefest event have been invited to speak briefly about what will be happening over the next week in order to give attendees a preview and a chance to find out more details.

And what a week!

This year’s Pridefest features events ranging from a luau at The Raven to hiking to a film festival to Drag Queen Bingo. One of the biggest events (and probably the most familiar to the casual celebrant) is a parade that wraps around downtown Anchorage and ends at the Delaney Parkstrip, where participants celebrate with food, music,and sampling the wares from the various vendor booths.

But this year, things are going to be a little different: instead of a parade with floats, vehicles and banners, this year will have a “Celebrating Diversity March.” And, Moylan says, a little bit of a dance party.

“Specifically, we’re going to have a dance party that takes us from a perspective of when the gay movement was quiet, and I’m talking ‘disco quiet.’ When people were going to clubs in big cities and they were dancing in lieu of being found out, to the point of now, where actually, we’re the one’s who have the hippest, trendiest music. You got to a gay club because it’s the place to go.

And now we’re going to actually turn this corner to increase the beat. We’re going to move to electronica, to rap, to a perspective of youth and their involvement. That has changed musically, as well as the perspective of the whole movement. So we put it together and, culturally, there is a shift. And we’re going to present all of it on that Saturday.”

Drew Phoenix, also a co-chair of Identity, Inc. and one of the other Pridefest quad-chairs, points out that a march is also more accessible than a parade.

“This is for everybody, no matter who you are. And also, I think, much more inclusive of allies…Part of it was sort of going back to our roots as a political movement. A march is more of a movement than a parade, which is more spectator participant.”

Moylan describes the scene from last year’s parade, where at first she says she did see many spectators. However, as the parade wrapped around the parkstrip, she realized that the parade seemed longer than usual. And then she realized that the “pockets of emptiness” she was seeing on the sidewalk was because people were getting up and joining the parade.

“I said, ‘this is remarkable! Well, no wonder there’s nobody watching. People are in the parade!’ So why not really transform this and make it much more emotional and more hip?”

In a way, by bucking the tradition of the parade, this year’s Pridefest is returning to its roots and embracing an older tradition of activism and inclusion.

According to Phoenix, this year’s Pridefest also marks a positive step forward in terms of local business participation as sponsors or vendors.

“We have over 60 vendors for the Pridefest [on Saturday, June 15], which is phenomenal. I think businesses see our economic power, and are taking note and getting involved. Which is big. Brand new.”

While both organizers acknowledge that Pride festivities may not mean the same thing to every participant, Moylan says that she hopes people will give themselves the chance to take part in the festivities.

“It’s not for me to define another human being or their sexuality. It’s not for me to define what kind of a good time they’re going to have at this event. I couldn’t say ‘for you it’s political’ or ‘for you it’s emotional,’ I could only say that ‘it will affect you deeply. It will move you in a way that you will forever be changed, and will mark that point as a turning ground, for what you felt was a positive shift in Anchorage, Alaska.’”

Pridefest events start on Saturday, June 8 and run through Sunday, June 16. For a full schedule and list of sponsors, go to the event website: alaskapride.org.

Light the Way to Justice: Tuesday, March 26 in Anchorage

Light the Way to Justice: March 26, 2013United for marriage: Light the way to justice. The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments this Tuesday and Wednesday, March 26–27, in two cases about freedom to marry. Please join us on Tuesday, March 26, at the federal courthouse in Anchorage (7th & C) in a circle united for equality.

The two cases the Supreme Court will hear concern  the discriminatory Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and California’s Proposition 8. The cases will be heard even as a bipartisan majority of Americans recognize that the ability to marry the person you love is a Constitutional right. Please join us as we join celebrations in Washington, DC and every state in the nation in support of marriage equality.

This one hour gathering is intended to circle the federal courthouse in Anchorage.  There is no program. Only unity. This is a simple way to show your support for marriage equality in Anchorage.

  • Date/time: Tuesday, March 26, 5:00–6:00 PM
  • Location: U.S. District Courthouse, Anchorage, 7th Avenue & C Street
  • Sponsored by: Christians for Equality
  • Further info: See the Facebook event page

Sara’s News, 11/5/12: Marriage equality on the ballot tomorrow in four states

Marriage equality is on the ballot tomorrow in four states; Catholics for Marriage Equality in Washington State; presidential election; and other recent LGBTQ news selected by Sara Boesser in Juneau, Alaska, with additional info from Bent Alaska.

Marriage equality

Marriage = love + loveMarriage equality is on the ballot tomorrow in four states: Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, and Washington State.  Things are looking tight in Maryland and Minnesota right now, but are looking very good in Maine in Washington. Marriage equality-related election results will be online starting tomorrow night at Marriage Equality USA.

The Final Stretch: A Round-Up Of Ads For And Against Marriage Equality
ThinkProgress LGBT, November 5, 2012

Tomorrow, four states will have the opportunity to weigh in on the question of marriage equality, three of which will have the opportunity to embrace the freedom for the very first time. All four campaigns have had fierce efforts both for and against, with millions of dollars spent on ads. As election day approaches, here is a final look at what the campaigns have been saying to the public in Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, and Washington.

Catholics defy bishops to pray for gay marriage
Seattle, Seattle PI, October 28, 2012

The folk mass hymns and gospels were familiar, the response “And with your spirit” recited Sundays in church by millions of Catholics, but the 120 faithful gathered outside Seattle’s St. James Cathedral on Sunday afternoon were praying for a cause their bishops are campaigning against.

Mobilized by Catholics for Marriage Equality, they celebrated a “Liturgy of Love,” praying for the recognition of same-sex unions and the passage of Referendum 74, which would legalize marriage between persons of the same gender.

WATCH: Lady Gaga Gets Out the Vote for Marriage Equality
Advocate, November 2, 2012

Gaga reminds voters in Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, and Washington that they can weigh in on marriage equality-related measures Tuesday.

WATCH: Maryland Marriage Ad Features Presidents Obama and Clinton
Advocate, November 2, 2012

Marylanders for Marriage Equality, the coalition working to pass the measure known as Question 6, released its final TV ad Friday featuring Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton with the message that “it’s time” for same-sex couples to be able to legally marry in the state.

Final Poll Shows Marriage Equality Ahead 52%-45% in Maine
Maine, Gayapolis, November 3, 2012

Maine’s referendum to legalize gay marriage is leading for passage by a 52/45 margin, numbers virtually unchanged from 52/44 in our last survey. What we’ve found historically with these gay marriage ballot measures though is that undecided voters tend to end up voting anti-gay so if I had to guess this is something more like a 52/48 advantage and at that point it can go either way- this is likely to be a pretty close vote.

THR Poll: ‘Glee’ and ‘Modern Family’ Drive Voters to Favor Gay Marriage — Even Many Romney Voters
Hollywood Reporter, November 3, 2012

Shows with gay characters, like Glee, Modern Family, and The New Normal, are helping drive voters to historically unprecedented support of gay marriage….

LGBTQ voters

New Logo TV Presidential Election Poll: LGBT Voters May Make the Difference In Close Election
NewNowNext, November 2, 2012

A second Logo poll, again conducted by Harris Interactive, reveals that the relatively small but increasingly energized LGBT voting population could be pivotal in this extremely close presidential election next week.

Religion

Group Petitions Christian Magazine to Accept Pro-Equality Ad
Advocate, November 2, 2012

Faith in America, a pro-LGBT religious organization, is petitioning Christianity Today magazine to accept its ad encouraging parents to accept their LGBT children.

Post-DADT military

Transgender Army vet to lead gay rights group
Navy Times, October 25, 2012

A transgender veteran has been named to head a newly combined organization advocating for the interests of gay, bisexual and transgender service members.

Army veteran Allyson Robinson said one of her priorities will be to garner support for getting full military benefits for same-sex military couples.

Transgender

Joe Biden: Transgender Discrimination Is ‘The Civil Rights Issue Of Our Time’
Washington, Huffington Post, October 10, 2012

Vice President Joe Biden said transgender discrimination is “the civil rights issue of our time” during a visit to a Florida field office on Tuesday, according to pool reports.

Coming out

I’m Gay Or Bisexual And Proud Of It! 48 Stars Who Have Come Out Of The Closet
Radar.com, October 29, 2012

From big screen bombshells and television’s most beloved actors to sexy singers and talk show hosts, a bevy of celebrities have come out of the closet and admitted to being gay or bisexual.

A word from our editor…

Bent Alaska editor Mel Green will be taking a “semi-hiatus” during November 2012 to focus on her writing. This doesn’t mean complete silence — but she will be scaling back.

A word from our editor... (Halloween 2012)A word (& then a few more words) from our editor…

First, Happy Halloween!

Second, I am taking an (announced, this time) semi-hiatus from Bent Alaska for all of November to focus on my writing. You’ve probably noticed that I’ve already been in an (unannounced) semi-hiatus, partly due to being sick for most of October, but also due to a strong need — after a lengthy period of public involvement (Anchorage LGBT Discrimination Survey, Anchorage Baptist Temple tax issue, One Anchorage campaign, Anchorage election recount…) — to return to my own writing, which I’ve had very little time to do over the past two years. And I really really need it.

By “semi-hiatus” I mean that I won’t be completely absent: I’ll still be doing Sara’s News posts & occasional news items on Bent’s Facebook wall. I’ll also try to return to reliability in reposting event stuff on the Facebook wall that people pass on to me. But I’ll be scaled back otherwise as, really, I’ve already been, & will not be attempting to keep up with our Google events calendar this coming month, or keeping up with events on the blog.

In the next few days, I’m gonna put a few questions out on Bent’s Facebook wall for Bent readers/FB friends about what you most need from a venue like Bent Alaska, & how to make it sustainable for the long term — an issue I will be returning to in December.

In the meantime, thank all of you for your patience, understanding, & support.

Melissa S. (Mel) Green
Bent Alaska editor

P.S. If you’re curious what I’m writing over November, please visit my (heretofore long-neglected) personal blog Henkimaa or my Facebook wall.

Photo: Facebook profile for Halloween 2012 by Melissa S. Green. Inset: Mel in a National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) hoodie. Cover: The bloodshot eye is courtesy a burst blood vessel from heavy coughing when I was ill in early October.
Adepero Oduye and Sahra Mellesse in writer/director Dee Rees' film "Pariah"

“Pariah” screening & discussion at UAA Friday, Nov. 2

Pariah, a critically acclaimed film about a 17-year-old African-American woman embracing her lesbian identity, will screen at UAA on Friday, November 2, with a discussion to follow in honor of Mya Dale. The event is free and open to the public.

Pariah: A viewing and dicussion in honor of Mya DaleThe Family at UAA and the UAA Multicultural Center will present a screening of writer/director Dee Rees’ critically acclaimed feature film Pariah at University of Alaska Anchorage. The film will be followed by a discussion. Poet Shelby “Mahogany” Wilson will share a poem about acceptance. The event is free and open to the public, and food and refreshments will be provided.

Mya DaleThe screening and discussion are being held in remembrance of Mya Dale, a UAA student and member of The Family who tragically died this past summer.  In life, Mya struggled with acceptance for herself, and persistently sought to create conversations to bridge differences and bring understanding and acceptance between people, including a workshop on disability during the 2011 Anchorage Pride Conference, and two discussion panels at UAA inviting students of various backgrounds to intellectually consider specific African American experience, contributions, and thought. The screening and discussion of Pariah is one of several events since her death organized by friends who wish to honor her memory by carrying on the work of creating acceptance.

This is Pariah‘s second appearance in Anchorage; it screened this past March at the Bear Tooth. Bent Alaska wrote about it at the time:

Adepero Oduye and Sahra Mellesse in writer/director Dee Rees' film "Pariah"In Pariah, Adepero Oduye portrays Alike (pronounced ah-lee-kay), a 17-year-old African-American woman who lives with her parents Audrey and Arthur (Kim Wayans and Charles Parnell) and younger sister Sharonda (Sahra Mellesse) in Brooklyn’s Fort Greene neighborhood. She has a flair for poetry, and is a good student at her local high school.

Alike is quietly but firmly embracing her identity as a lesbian. With the sometimes boisterous support of her best friend, out lesbian Laura (Pernell Walker), Alike is especially eager to find a girlfriend. At home, her parents’ marriage is strained and there is further tension in the household whenever Alike’s development becomes a topic of discussion. Pressed by her mother into making the acquaintance of a colleague’s daughter, Bina (Aasha Davis), Alike finds Bina to be unexpectedly refreshing to socialize with.

Wondering how much she can confide in her family, Alike strives to get through adolescence with grace, humor, and tenacity – sometimes succeeding, sometimes not, but always moving forward.

A world premiere at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, the contemporary drama Pariah is the feature-length expansion of writer/director Dee Rees’ award-winning 2007 short film of the same title. Spike Lee is among the feature’s executive producers. At Sundance, cinematographer Bradford Young was honored with the [U.S. Dramatic Competition] Excellence in Cinematography Award.

“The year’s best coming-of-age film…. Writer/director Dee Rees’ voice is already powerful and gracefully confident… Actress Adepero Oduye is wonderful, the movie inspiring.” — Mary Pols, Time

Rated for sexual content and language.

  • Date/time: Friday, November 2, 5:30 PM
  • Location: Room 110, Rasmuson Hall, University of Alaska Anchorage, 3416 Seawolf Drive, Anchorage (see map)
  • Cost: This will be a FREE event, open to the public, food and drinks provided.
  • Parking: There is no fee for parking on campus on Fridays, so parking is also FREE.
  • Further info: Official Pariah website, Pariah Facebook page; Bent Alaska’s posts about Mya Dale.

Watch the trailer:

Sara’s News, 10/30/12: Obama v. Romney on marriage equality & 3rd Circuit DOMA decision

When it comes to marriage equality, it’s no contest between Obama and Romney; a landmark decision on DOMA by the Third Circuit; and other recent LGBTQ news selected by Sara Boesser in Juneau, Alaska, with additional info from Bent Alaska.

Obama v. Romney

Pres. Barack Obama & former Governor Mitt Romney in the second presidential debate, 17 Oct 2012Obama endorses same-sex marriage initiatives in three states
Seattle, Reuters, October 26, 2012

President Barack Obama on Thursday endorsed state ballot initiatives to legalize same-sex marriage in Washington state, Maryland and Maine as he sought to galvanize gay and lesbian enthusiasm for his re-election bid.

Statements issued by the Obama campaign in those three states urging voters to approve the gay-marriage measures on their respective November 6 ballots came five months after Obama became the first U.S. president to express support for the right of same-sex couples to wed.

President Obama: How to End Marriage Discrimination (Spoiler Alert: It’s Freedom to Marry’s Strategy)
Huffington Post, October 27, 2012

In an MTV interview on Friday, President Obama reiterated his support for the freedom to marry, recounted the many steps his Administration has taken to stand up for gay families and equality under the law, and shared some thoughts on how the law and history suggest America will end marriage discrimination.

Romney Still Supports Federal Marriage Amendment
Advocate, October 21, 2012

A surrogate for Governor Mitt Romney’s campaign has clarified that the presidential candidate supports an amendment in the U.S. Constitution that would define marriage for only heterosexual couples

Romney – Hospital Visitation Is ‘Benefit,’ Not A Right For Homosexual Couples
Sodahead, October 22, 2012

In his latest move in what is seemingly a war on the LGBT community, Mitt Romney has stated that hospital visitation is a benefit, as opposed to a right, for homosexual couples. In stark contrast, Obama’s move two years ago was to mandate that hospitals must treat homosexual couples the same as heterosexual couples. This includes (but is not limited to) visitation rights. Visitation rights are also described under the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare).

Ellen DeGeneres: Mitt Romney is scary
Politico, October 23, 2012

And what if Mitt Romney wins instead? “If you’re a woman, you should be very, very scared of that, for many reasons,” she said. “And obviously as a gay person he doesn’t believe in me having the same rights, so of course I’m not happy about that.”

DOMA: Windsor v. United States decision

Thea Spyer (left) and her widow, Edie WindsorFederal Appeals Court Rules DOMA Unconstitutional in Windsor Case
New York, Advocate, October 18, 2012

The Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York ruled against the Defense of Marriage Act today in the case Windsor v. United States, involving the lesbian widow Edith “Edie” Windsor, marking the second time a federal appeals court has found the 1996 law unconstitutional.

Appeals court rules against Defense of Marriage Act
New York, Reuters, October 18, 2012

The ruling by the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals was in favor of Edith Windsor, an 83-year-old woman who argued that the Defense of Marriage Act discriminates against gay and lesbian couples, violating equal protection provisions of the U.S. Constitution.

Victory for lesbian, years after her longtime partner’s death
New York, CNN, October 19, 2012

It was a wonderful life. That’s how Edith Windsor describes her partnership with Thea Clara Spyer. Theirs was not a fleeting romance — the women were together 42 years sharing ups and downs, laughs and tears.

From the editor: This decision is highly significant. The judge who wrote the opinion, Chief Judge Dennis Jacobs of the 2nd Circuit, is extremely conservative. The opinion itself is based on legal reasoning with a strong effect. As Greg Sargent of the Washington Post blog The Plum Line wrote,

This bodes well long term for ending DOMA for good. Prominent gay rights advocate Richard Socarides explains to me what it will mean if that happens: “The government will give full federal recognition to same sex marriages in the states where that is now allowed. That means couples that are married, for instance, in New York will be entitled to all the federal benefits that any other married couples are entitled to.”

Ian Millhiser of ThinkProgress expands:

This is a really big deal. Jacobs is not simply saying that DOMA imposes unique and unconstitutional burdens on gay couples, he is saying that any attempt by government to discriminate against gay people must have an “exceedingly persuasive” justification. This is the same very skeptical standard afforded to laws that discriminate against women. If Jacobs’ reasoning is adopted by the Supreme Court, it will be a sweeping victory for gay rights, likely causing state discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation to be virtually eliminated. And the fact that this decision came from such a conservative judge makes it all the more likely that DOMA will ultimately be struck down by the Supreme Court.

More on this case from the ACLU, which is representing Windsor in this case; from Freedom to Marry; or at Wikipedia.

Other marriage equality news

Catholic Church, NOM Responsible for 60% of Funding to Fight Marriage Equality
Advocate, October 18, 2012

The Roman Catholic Church, its affiliate the Knights of Columbus, and the Catholic-based National Organization for Marriage are responsible for more than 60% of the funding behind anti-equality campaigns in the four states with marriage-related questions on the ballot this year, according to the Human Rights Campaign.

Op-ed: Thank Your Grandparents for Equality Surging in Polls
Advocate, October 28, 2012

This year might bring the first-ever statewide vote in favor of marriage for same-sex couples — and for that you have your grandmother to thank. Why? Because contrary to conventional wisdom, Americans born in the 1940s have been changing their minds on the marriage issue faster than nearly any other age group.

Deaf university roiled by gay marriage controversy
Washington, Associated Press, October 19, 2012

Gallaudet University is under fire from both proponents and opponents of gay marriage after placing an administrator on leave for signing a petition to put Maryland’s gay-marriage law on the ballot.

Two Women Kiss In Front Of Anti-Gay Protests In Marseille, France
Huffington Post, October 23, 2012

This is the image from anti-gay marriage protests in France that many will remember above all others: two young woman kissing in the middle of angry demonstrators.

The picture, taken by AFP photographer Gérard Julien, went viral on social media and has all the ingredients to become a symbolic image of the movement in favor of marriage equality.

Outing v. reporting

Forced Outing’: Dragging Gay Politicians Out of the Closet, for a Cause
Takepart.com, October 11, 2012

Publicly outing closeted politicians who block gay-rights legislation is an effective tool in the push for LGBT equality, according to Michael Rogers, a former blogger who ran stories purporting to out several prominent Republicans in recent years, including representatives David Dreier and Ed Schrock and South Carolina Lieutenant Governor Andre Bauer….

Rogers, a Washington, D.C.-based gay-rights activist, doesn’t like to call what he did “forced outing.”

“I did what I like to call reporting,” says Rogers, now the managing director of news site Raw Story.

Research

Foster Kids Do Equally Well When Adopted by Gay, Lesbian or Heterosexual Parents, Study Suggests
Science Daily, October 18, 2012

High-risk children adopted from foster care do equally well when placed with gay, lesbian or heterosexual parents, UCLA psychologists report in the first multi-year study of children adopted by these three groups of parents.

3% of U.S. population is homosexual, bisexual or transgender: Gallup poll
New York, Associated Press, October 18, 2012

A new Gallup survey, touted as the largest of its kind, estimates that 3.4 percent of American adults identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.

The findings, released today, were based on interviews with more than 121,000 people. Gallup said it is the largest study ever aimed at calculating the nation’s LGBT population.

Boy Scouts of America

“Perversion files” show locals helped cover up
Portland, Oregon, Associated Press, October 2012

An array of local authorities — police chiefs, prosecutors, pastors and town Boy Scout leaders among them — quietly shielded scoutmasters and others who allegedly molested children, according to a newly opened trove of confidential files compiled from 1959 to1985.

Transgender

Transgender Voters Left in the Cold
Good Morning America, October 9, 2012

A study from the Williams Institute, an LGBT think tank at the University of Los Angeles, estimates that about 25,000 transgender Americans could be disenfranchised in the upcoming election because of a patchwork of voter ID laws.

And it’s not just voter ID requirements that are the problem.

Deployed soldier begins sex change
Advocate, Army Times, October 15, 2012

Call her Keith. That’s the name this 26-year-old specialist, now deployed to Afghanistan, plans to take when she completes a transition begun several months ago when she started giving herself testosterone injections every other week, under the direction of a civilian doctor who specializes in gender changes.

The World’s First Transgender Bellbird Discovered in New Zealand
New Zealand, Advocate, October 17 2012

Workers at Zealandia, an eco-sanctuary in New Zealand, have announced that they’ve discovered the country’s first transgender bellbird (which is also known by its Māori name korimako). They have dubbed it ”butch bellbird,” according to the Dominion Post News, because its DNA tested as female but the bird acts like a male and has a mix of each sex’s plumage. The korimako are native to New Zealand, so this may be the only transgender bellbird in the world.

Man Files Petition to WHO – ‘We Are Trans, Not Sick’
London, Good Morning America, October 19, 2012

Maxwell Zachs is on a global crusade to normalize what until now has been considered a mental illness — being transgender…. [H]e has filed a petition with change.org demanding that the World Health Organization (WHO) eliminate the diagnosis “transsexualism” from the mental disorders section of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD). He says the designation only contributes to discrimination.

Books

Do You Dream in Color?: Insights from a Girl Without Sight by Laurie RubinBlind, Lesbian Opera Singer Inspires With Her Story
Out.com, October 22, 2012

Blind since birth, mezzo-soprano Laurie Rubin tells her empowering story in memoir ‘Do You Dream in Color?: Insights from a Girl Without Sight‘.

Sports

Cruz wins first fight since announcing he’s gay
Kissimmee, Florida, San Francisco Chronicle, October 19, 2012

These last two weeks have weighed heavily on Orlando Cruz.

But as soon as he walked out to a cheering crowd displaying flags of his native Puerto Rico, boxing’s first openly gay fighter could finally breathe and do what he came to do, slugging his way to a victory by unanimous decision over Jorge Pazos.

Olympic Figure Skater Matt Savoie Marries His Partner
Massachusetts, Advocate, October 24, 2012

Former Olympian Matt Savoie married his partner on October 7 in Massachussetts. Savoie, who competed alongside Johnny Weir and represented the U.S. in the 2006 Winter Games in Torino, met his husband while both were students at Cornell Law School.

Photo credits: (1) Pres. Barack Obama & former Governor Mitt Romney in the second presidential debate, 17 Oct 2012. Photo from broadcast. (2) Thea Spyer (left) and her widow, Edie Windsor, the plaintiff in Windsor v. United States. Courtesy ACLU.

Sara’s News, 10/18/12: The very real consequences of DADT repeal

The very real consequences of DADT repeal; seeking survivor benefits for same-sex partner of Alaska shooting victim; waiting on SCOTUS decision about whether it will hear Prop 8 case; and other recent LGBTQ news selected by Sara Boesser in Juneau, Alaska.

The post-DADT military

Post DADT: First kiss.26 Very Real Consequences Of DADT Repeal
Advocate, Buzzfeed, September 11, 2012

The liberal media wants you to think that everything is fine in the military after DADT was repealed. But why have they been so silent about these VERY REAL consequences? Tell everyone you know about these issues. We will not be silenced!

The above is tongue-in-cheek. The story is actually a celebratory collection of 26 photos — some of them by now quite famous after going viral in social media — of LGB serviceemembers who can now serve openly. Sadly, transgender servicemembers must still hide.

Alaska

Lambda Legal Seeks Survivor Benefits for Lesbian Partner of Alaska Shooting Victim
Alaska, Bent Alaska and Lambda Legal Press Release, September 24, 2012

On October 29, 2011, Kerry Fadely was murdered at her workplace, the Millennium Alaskan Hotel in Anchorage. Today, Lambda Legal filed a legal challenge seeking survivor benefits for Kerry’s partner of 10 years, Debbie Harris.

Marriage equality

Supreme Court Still Mum on Prop. 8 Case
Washington, Advocate, September 25, 2012

If the Supreme Court does not hear Perry v. Brown, a February 2012 decision finding Proposition 8 unconstitutional will be upheld, permanently invalidating Proposition 8, allowing same-sex couples to marry in California.

Transgender

Transsexual twin sisters to register as men
Shanghai, China, Shanghai Daily, September 6, 2012

The country’s [China’s] first transsexual twin sisters are expected to complete their surgeries and have their registered gender changed at the police, said the younger of the two, who will be discharged from a local hospital this week.

Bisexual pride

Berkeley lawmakers recognize Bisexual Pride Day
Berkeley, CA, Associated Press, September 18, 2012

Berkeley on Tuesday became what is thought to be the nation’s first city to officially proclaim a day recognizing bisexuals, a sexual minority that often complains of being derided as sexually confused fence-sitters.

The City Council unanimously and without discussion declared Sept. 23 as Bisexual Pride and Bi Visibility Day. Since 1999, bisexual activists have claimed the date to celebrate their community, and bisexual pride events routinely are held in Los Angeles, Boston, Chicago and other cities across the nation.

Boy Scouts of America

Boy Scouts Grouped Gay Leaders With Child Molesters, Perverts
Think Progress, October 15, 2012

In June, the Oregon Supreme Court ordered the release of 20,000 pages of files kept by Boy Scouts of America on “ineligible volunteers.” Portions of those documents were released online last week. But included, among those leaders accused or convicted of molesting Scouts, were files on several suspected gay Scout leaders who were never accused of any inappropriate behavior.

Bullying

Christian groups finds gay agenda in an anti-bullying day
Hawaii, Star Advertiser, October 15, 2012

On Mix It Up at Lunch Day, schoolchildren around the country are encouraged to hang out with someone they normally might not speak to.

The program, started 11 years ago by the Southern Poverty Law Center and now in more than 2,500 schools, was intended as a way to break up cliques and prevent bullying.

But this year, the American Family Association, a conservative evangelical group, has called the project “a nationwide push to promote the homosexual lifestyle in public schools” and is urging parents to keep their children home from school Oct. 30, the day most of the schools plan to participate this year.

Entertainment

Check Out Brandi Carlile’s Wedding Picture!
Boston, SheWired, October 10, 2012

Over the weekend, out singer/songwriter and newly married lady Brandi Carlile shared a gorgeous photo from her September 15 wedding to Catherine Shepherd.

“It was truly one of our best days, completely awkward and human and beautiful,” Carlile wrote in a Facebook post accompanying the photo. “I’m married to my best friend and nothing has ever brought me more joy than that.”

Gay characters at record high on U.S. television
Los Angeles, Reuters, October 15, 2012

New shows “The New Normal,” “Girls” and comedy “Go On” have helped U.S. television rack up a record number of gay, bisexual and transgender characters, gay rights group GLAAD said on Friday.

Sports

Former MLB Owner Comes Out, Hopes Players Do The Same
Pittsburgh, Advocate, September 23, 2012

The former owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates, Kevin McClatchy, is still amazed that not a single pro athlete has come out while playing. For his part, McClatchy came out for the first time in an interview with the New York Times this weekend.

Photo credit: Fire Controlman 2nd Class Marissa Gaeta, left, assigned to the amphibious dock landing ship USS Oak Hill (LSD 51) kisses her fiancé, Fire Controlman 3rd Class Citlalic Snell, following the ship’s return to homeport after a three-month deployment in the Caribbean. Navy News Service, 21 Dec 2011. Via Wikimedia Commons.
Blood donation not discrimination

Ask Lambda Legal: Blood donations

Lambda Legal: Making the case for equalityIn this month’s “Ask Lambda Legal” column, Lambda Legal answers a question about the federal government’s longstanding ban against donations of blood from men who have sex with men (MSM).

“Ask Lambda Legal” is a monthly column on legal questions affecting members of the LGBTQI community. 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.

Editor’s note: A question about the blood donation ban also came up today on Bent’s Facebook wall with reference to an upcoming benefit for Blood Bank of Alaska. Stay tuned for Bent Alaska’s followup article in the next few days.

Ask Lambda Legal
Blood Donations

By Scott Schoettes, HIV Project Director for Lambda Legal

Q: I’m a gay man and have wanted to donate blood for some time. I heard the policy banning blood donations from men who have sex with men may be changing, is that true?

Scott Schoettes, HIV Project Director for Lambda LegalA: Since 1983, gay men have been banned from donating blood — the actual policy says that if you are a man and have had sex with another man since 1977, you are not allowed to give. While intended to minimize transmission of HIV through a blood transfusion, this discriminatory policy is not supported by medical science.

Earlier this year, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) asked for comments on a pilot study to assess alternative policies that would allow some gay and bisexual men to donate blood. In the pilot program, men who have sex with men (MSM) would be able to donate blood after a five-year or one-year waiting period after their last sexual encounter with a man. Lambda Legal and a number of other HIV and LGBT advocacy organizations recently submitted comments to HHS about how to improve the pilot program because it does not adequately differentiate between lower and higher risk sexual behaviors and its proposal of a five-year or one-year deferral period isn’t in line with current medical science.

Regardless of sexual orientation, the risk of acquiring a sexually transmitted infection like HIV varies based upon the frequency and type of sexual behavior, as well as an individual’s safe-sex practices. Therefore, screening questions should identify those who are at low risk for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections — including MSM who are in monogamous relationships or those who consistently practice safer sex — and allow them to donate blood.

Blood donation not discriminationIn addition, Lambda Legal strongly suggests that the waiting period for all donors whose behavior is considered higher risk be consistent with — and not significantly longer than—the “window” period of a blood bank’s testing method. For some HIV tests, the window period for HIV detection can be as short as three weeks, while other HIV tests have a window period of about three months. For all available HIV testing, however, the waiting period would be considerably shorter than the one-year or five-year delays currently proposed. Deferral periods that are four to fifteen times the length of the relevant window period will continue to unnecessarily restrict the available blood supply by turning away donors based on stereotypes instead of science.

While no changes have yet been made to the blood donation policy, we are hopeful that HHS will adopt new policies based on current medical knowledge and testing technology, instead of unjustified discriminatory stereotypes about gay and bisexual men. If you have any questions, or feel you have been discriminated against because of your gender, sexual orientation, or HIV status, contact Lambda Legal’s Help Desk at 1-866-542-8336, or see http://lambdalegal.org/help.

Acceptance: An alternative approach to suicide intervention, at Alaska Pride Conference 2012

Acceptance: An Alternative Approach to Suicide Intervention“Acceptance: An Alternative Approach to Suicide Intervention” comprises two workshops at Alaska Pride Conference 2012 on Saturday, October 6, part of the “Acceptance” series of discussions in honor of Mya Dale.

Conference participants will hear panelists discuss the topic of suicide intervention from two different approaches. In the first workshop, members of our own community will talk about their personal struggle with self-harm urges and share a powerful tool they’ve use to reduce risk  In the second, behavioral health professionals come to us pro bono for frank talk about mental illness, how we can support, and how we can be supported.

Please join us at Alaska Pride Conference 2012 at the Millennium Alaskan Hotel on Saturday, October 6.

Track 1 (1:50 to 3:00 PM)
Everyday Peoples’ Tools to Resist Suicide and Keep on Living

Bianca and Mel, with Tami, Shannon, and Danny

A panel of individuals who have experienced suicidal thoughts or attempts, depressed or anxious moods and self-harm, share personal tools they have used to overcome and survive these challenging times. The workshop enables attendees to recognize and mitigate conditions that can intensify the urge to self-harm or commit suicide. Panelists help attendees by sharing their own methods, encouraging them to help themselves. Mental Health challenges are normalized. Participants exercise  using the HALT assessment (Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired) ; discussing what things they would do to take care of themselves.

Track 2 (3:20 to 4:30 PM)
Battleground of the Mind: The Connection between Mental Health and Suicidal Thought — Ways to Understand, Support and Heal
Bianca and panelists

Mental health professionals discuss conditions or emotional states that include a high risk for suicide. Panelists discuss options and the importance of education and support for people wrestling with mental health conditions and challenges, along with their family and friends.  Attendees are informed about some approaches and symptoms of mental illness/ conditions known to carry a risk for suicide.  Audience feels free to discuss and ask questions about conditions or symptoms experienced or observed. Discussion has the effect of increasing understanding, reducing stigma and introducing options. Attendees are informed about how they can be further educated, supportive and get support for themselves.

Panelists for this session include:

  • Dr. Ebony McClain-Owens
  • Tami Lubitsh, MA, RDT, LPC
  • Kaya T. Kade, LPC, CDHS, TEP
  • Prentiss Pemberton, LCSW
  • Charles Hart

See also complete information about all the workshops and events at Alaska Pride Conference 2012.

  • Date/time: 8:00 AM – 4:30 PM
  • Location: Millennium Alaskan Hotel, 4800 Spenard Road, Anchorage (see map)
  • Cost of admission: $20 adult; $10 student. Scholarships available for 2 hours of volunteering at conference. Registration includes Saturday breakfast and lunch. $5 additional at the door. Youth scholarships available: see application forms at Identity website.
  • Further info: see Facebook events page or Identity website.