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Tag: LGBTQ+

  • PolitiFact – DeSantis and Haley’s back-and-forth over bathroom bills in fourth GOP debate

    PolitiFact – DeSantis and Haley’s back-and-forth over bathroom bills in fourth GOP debate

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    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis brought up bathroom access as one of many attacks on former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley in the fourth Republican presidential primary debate.  

    “They had a bill to try to say that men shouldn’t go into girls’ bathrooms, and she killed that bill,” DeSantis said.

    DeSantis has a point that the bill died and Haley had criticized it. But Haley — who said DeSantis criticized bathroom bills before he became governor — also has a point.

    As governor, Haley said in 2016 that she didn’t believe it was “necessary” to pass a Senate bill that would have required people to use the bathroom that aligned with their sex. At the time, a similar law in North Carolina, HB 2, had sparked backlash and caused several businesses and artists to boycott the state. 

    The South Carolina bill, which would have applied to public and school restrooms, stalled in committee, so it never made it to Haley’s desk. 

    During the Dec. 6 debate, Haley said she opposed the bill because of a lack of incidents involving transgender people in bathrooms. This was consistent with what The Washington Post reported in 2016 that she said at that time. In a 2022 appearance on Fox News she again said that she “strong-armed” the bill, saying schools should resolve the issue with parents. 

    Haley lobbed a similar accusation at DeSantis: “When he was running for governor and they asked him about that, he said he didn’t think bathroom bills were a good use of his time.”

    Her campaign cited a clip of DeSantis from his 2018 run for Florida governor in which he said at a campaign event that he would “not pass a law” restricting bathroom access. DeSantis said in the clip that “getting into the bathroom wars — I don’t think that’s a good use of our time.”

    Flash-forward: In May 2023, DeSantis signed a law that restricts transgender people from using the bathroom that aligns with their gender identity in public schools, universities, government buildings and prisons, the Tampa Bay Times reported

    RELATED: Fact-checking the fourth Republican presidential debate

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  • PolitiFact – El papa Francisco no usó, ni inventó una cruz LGBT

    PolitiFact – El papa Francisco no usó, ni inventó una cruz LGBT

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    Una imagen en X declara que el papa Francisco acaba de inventar una cruz LGBT. Pero la imagen del papa con una cruz multicolor fue sacada de contexto.

    La publicación muestra al papa con una cruz de plata y otra multicolor colgando en su cuello. La dicha cruz tiene los colores verde, amarillo, naranja, rojo, turquesa y azul. 

    “Y ante nuestros ojos atónitos, el Papa acaba de inventar La Cruz LGBT. Acabo de darme cuenta que necesito absolutamente volver a leer los evangelios sobre las personas trans”, dice la publicación del 26 de noviembre. “Ah no, es verdad. No existen. Los ‘progresistas’ son enfermos mentales”.

    Screenshot de publicación en X.

    PolitiFact hizo una búsqueda de imagen inversa y encontró que esta cruz colorida no es parte de la comunidad LGBT, sino que representa a la Pastoral Juvenil Latinoamericana, una organización que promueve el catolicismo a los jóvenes. 

    La pastoral juvenil publicó en X el 2018 la imagen del papa con la cruz multicolor y explicó que los jóvenes auditores de latinoamérica le entregaron al papa un “pectoral con el símbolo de la Cruz de la PJ Latinoamericana, la cual representa el amor, oración y entrega de nuestros jóvenes lat (latinos) y de los agentes de PJ, asesores y animadores”. 

    También notamos que los colores en la cruz no son los mismos de la bandera LGBT, ya que no incluye el color violeta. Además que según la página web de la Pastoral Juvenil Latinoamericana, los colores en la cruz tienen un significado específico. 

    La página explica que la cruz lleva consigo los colores que representan cada región dentro de la pastoral. Por ejemplo, el verde representa a la región de México y Centroamérica; el amarillo-naranja representa a la region del Caribe; el rojo representa la región Andina y el azul representa la región Cono Sur. 

    PolitiFact contactó al Vaticano y a la Pastoral Juvenil Latinoamericana, pero no recibió respuesta. 

    No encontramos evidencia de que el papa Francisco haya creado una cruz LGBT, así que calificamos la declaración en X como Falsa. 

    Lea más reportes de PolitiFact en Español aquí.

    __________________________________________________________________________

    Debido a limitaciones técnicas, partes de nuestra página web aparecen en inglés. Estamos trabajando en mejorar la presentación.

     

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  • Florida Students Protest After Principal, Staff Are Reassigned Over Trans Athlete

    Florida Students Protest After Principal, Staff Are Reassigned Over Trans Athlete

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    Students staged a walkout at their South Florida high school Tuesday after the principal and other staffers were reassigned over a transgender student being allowed to play on a girls volleyball team.

    The employees at Monarch High School in Coconut Creek, north of Fort Lauderdale, were moved to nonschool sites amid an investigation into “allegations of improper student participation in sports,” the local school district confirmed.

    “Although we cannot comment further, we will continue to follow state law and will take appropriate action based on the outcome of the investigation,” John Sullivan, Broward County Public Schools’ chief communications and legislative affairs officer, said in a statement.

    Students conduct a walkout Tuesday after the principal and other staff members were removed from their positions at Monarch High School in Coconut Creek, Florida.

    D.A. Varela/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

    With the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) in 2021 made it law that transgender girls and women cannot play on female sports teams at schools.

    Peter Licata, the superintendent at Broward County Public Schools, said the employees were relocated after a constituent called him directly last week about “some factors that were not appropriate for girls volleyball.”

    “We want to do this right,” Licata said at a Tuesday press conference. “Nobody’s guilty of anything at this point. That’s what the investigation is for.”

    A spokesperson for Florida’s Education Department said it expects “serious consequences” for anyone who breaks state law.

    “Under Governor DeSantis, boys will never be allowed to play girls’ sports. It’s that simple,” the spokesperson said in an email. “As soon as the Department was notified that a biological male was playing on a girls’ team in Broward County, we instructed the district to take immediate action since this is a direct violation of Florida law.”

    Monarch High School Principal James Cecil and an assistant principal, athletic director and information management technician were identified as the employees relocated. A school athletic coach, who was working on a temporary basis, also had his services paused amid the investigation, the school district said.

    During their demonstration on a school athletic field, students held signs and chanted “trans lives matter” and “bring back Cecil,” according to NBC 6 South Florida, which captured aerial footage of the protest.

    Students, speaking with local media, shared their reactions to the volleyball team controversy.

    “I don’t think it should be a problem big enough for you to have the school’s principal reassigned,” one student told WSVN. “At the end of the day, that’s just an extracurricular.”

    “I don’t agree with that. He shouldn’t be allowed to play on the team,” another student told the outlet, referring to the transgender volleyball player. “If he’s a biological boy, I don’t think he should play on the team.”

    Safe Schools South Florida, a local LGBTQ+ organization for students, called the district’s handling of the situation an overreaction and expressed concern that the student had been inadvertently outed to her peers.

    “None of her fellow students in the high school apparently knew that she was trans,” the organization’s executive director, Scott Galvin, told HuffPost. “She has successfully presented, for her entire school career, as a female.”

    Though Galvin said that he hasn’t spoken directly with the student or her parents, he said he’s heard from other families who voiced concern that their trans children may be the next ones to have their private lives “trotted out for public discussion and debate.”

    “No minor should have to go through what this young lady is going through right now, all so that somebody else can prove some kind of political agenda.”

    – Scott Galvin, executive director of Safe Schools South Florida

    “Parents are freaking out. Other parents that I’ve spoken to … are just scared,” he said. “The trans community is already so disenfranchised and discriminated against, from an adult standpoint, and the families that are dealing with trans children have to work around so many different things, including just having a child in the home and all of the normal parental things going on.”

    He said he’s heard from some parents who want to speak out about the situation, but that they’re reticent because they don’t want to accidentally out their child or see them receive the same attention that the Monarch High School student got.

    “No minor should have to go through what this young lady is going through right now, all so that somebody else can prove some kind of political agenda,” Galvin said. “It’s not fair, and it’s a real tragedy that she’s experiencing all of this.”

    Cecil did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Earlier this month, a federal court dismissed a lawsuit filed by a Broward County high school student’s family that challenged the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act as unconstitutional.

    The student, who was born male but is transgender, has been taking hormone blockers since age 11, and throughout middle school she played on a school soccer team and in a recreational league for girls, according to the lawsuit. Under current law, however, she’s barred from participating in school sports that match her gender identity.

    The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida ruled that the law does not violate Title IX, which prohibits sex-based discrimination in education, or the U.S. Constitution.

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  • PolitiFact – Viral video of teacher instructing students about gender pronouns is a skit, not authentic

    PolitiFact – Viral video of teacher instructing students about gender pronouns is a skit, not authentic

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    Confrontational videos are a staple of the modern internet, whether they show a shouting match between neighbors or a parking lot fistfight.

    Some influencers are tapping into this trend with manufactured conflict — skits dramatizing hot-button issues. The most recent example is a video that appears to show a self-described “gender-neutral” schoolteacher instructing students on acceptable pronoun use.

    “I am not a female nor am I a male, I would be in between,” the teacher said in the Nov. 20, Facebook video. “So, right here would be my pronouns.”

    The instructor then pointed to a chart listing multiple pronouns including ze/zir/zirs, sometimes referred to as “neopronouns.” 

    (Screenshot of Facebook video)

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    Off-screen, supposed students express confusion and resistance. “Why do we have to learn this?” asked one. “I’m confused,” said another.

    Many people and groups online, including the conservative Young America’s Foundation, shared the video as if it showed something real. The foundation’s post had the caption, “These students are just as confused as we are.”

    This video does not depict a real classroom confrontation. It was created as a skit.

    A comedian named Jibrizy shared the original video Oct. 2 on his Facebook page. “Hey guys,” he said at the end of the eight-minute sketch, “that was all an act.” He then urged viewers to share the video and discuss it with their friends to find out their thoughts on the subject.

    This is not the first time Jibrizy’s videos have gone viral without context. In September, two skits, one of a confrontation on a plane and another in which a woman tears down a pride flag, went viral. Many people, including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., shared the videos on X thinking they were authentic.

    In his X profile, Jibrizy described his work as directing “social political video out as real life scenarios of the left and right for debate.” When the flag video went viral, Jibrizy posted to clarify his role: “I create video to start discussion,” he wrote. “It’s openly fake. But I want you to debate your point of view.” He regularly creates skits about LGBTQ+ topics and political issues

    We rate claims this video shows an authentic classroom discussion False.

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  • Tello’s Sapphic Christmas Movie Is the Representation Queer Horse Girls Deserve

    Tello’s Sapphic Christmas Movie Is the Representation Queer Horse Girls Deserve

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    Finally, queer horse girls have the holiday movie representation they deserve! Tello Films’ newest Christmas movie, A Holiday “I Do”, follows a divorced queer woman, Jane (Lindsay Hicks), whose holiday season is quickly falling apart.

    Her ex-husband and best friend, Mark (Joe Piazza), is getting married right before Christmas, and the bride, Heather (India Chappell), is super insecure about Jane and Mark’s friendship. The ex-couple’s daughter, Lexi (Colette Hahn), ends up caught in the middle—particularly when Heather, Mark, and Lexi go to pick up Heather’s parents at the airport and get snowed in, which forces them to spend the night out of town.

    Don’t worry, though: That’s the perfect setup for the movie’s main couple, Jane and Sue (Rivkah Reyes), to spend all kinds of time together making moon eyes and generally feeling big, gay feelings. You see, Sue is Heather’s wedding planner and Jane is Mark’s best woman, making her the next-best candidate to help Sue run errands like finalizing the floral arrangements and testing the catering menu (which definitely would have already happened at this point, but I digress). They go on a sleigh ride together and toboggan down a hill with Jane’s neighbors, whose involvement in the movie completely hinges upon making a little Christmas magic—I love them.

    Anyway. During their night of wedding errands, Jane and Sue nearly kiss at a beautiful wedding venue—before everything falls apart. They do basically everything you’d expect from a romantic couple in a holiday movie, which is really all I want whenever I turn one on.

    Meanwhile, Jane’s family horse farm, which she now runs in the absence of her late father, is at risk of being repossessed by the bank unless she and her mom (Jill Larson) find both a solution to their debt and a way to keep things running sustainably. I won’t spoil the ending for you, but if you assume Mark and Heather’s wedding has something to do with the farm … you might get to mark a square on your bingo card.

    A Holiday “I Do” successfully combines some of the best tropes of “Hallmark Christmas movies,” which has become a genre unto itself as more companies have gotten in on the trend of producing holiday-specific romantic comedies every winter. In the last several years, this primarily heterosexual genre has slowly begun to feature more LGBTQ+ romances, which is wonderful. A Holiday “I Do” is a fun, seasonal watch with a sweet plot and great character resolution.

    If you’re only interested in knowing what works about this movie, stop reading here. Holiday movies don’t have to be great or even good, and I totally get that—so if heavier critique isn’t for you, that’s cool! Watch this sapphic romcom and rejoice, especially if you, too, are a horse girl.

    It’s worth noting here that Tello Films has a much smaller budget than Hallmark or Netflix, and yet the company is producing LGBTQ+ holiday content rather than leaning into more heterosexual romcoms, which we love! Also, 10 percent of the producers’ profits went to The Trevor Project, which is great to see.

    However, I feel like it would be remiss not to mention that much of this movie just feels awkward, and not in a fun, quirky way. Long establishing shots of exteriors and interior walls (just walls) take up a fair amount of the runtime, and there’s very little music throughout the movie, which makes pauses feel especially excruciating. Reyes steals nearly all of her scenes unless she’s opposite Kayden Bryce, who plays Jane’s teenage neighbor and the key to saving the horse farm and the wedding, Noelle. Hicks has an unfortunate tendency to grimace even when she’s supposed to be happy, which starts in the opening scene—speed-dating at a lesbian bar—and does not stop until the final moments of the movie.

    Furthermore, the banker handling the farm’s loan is a Black woman (Marsha Warfield) who’s weirdly vilified even though she’s clearly rooting for Jane’s family to keep their ancestral home. She’s the only Black person with dialogue in the movie, which makes this characterization feel especially pointed. Reyes, a queer, Filipinx-Jewish woman; one of Mark’s groomsmen; and stablehand Joseph (Rish Mitra) are the only other people of color in the movie. In this way, Tello is unfortunately following suit with casting choices for its new Christmas flick.

    Last but not least, the big kiss between Jane and Sue is the last thing we see before the credits roll, and it’s way too short! These women have gone through a lot since their meet-cute and they deserve to make out about it to a sweet song while lights twinkle all around them. Just saying.

    A Holiday “I Do” is available to rent or buy via Tello Films.

    (featured image: Tello Films)

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    Samantha Puc

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  • Inside the Heartbreaking Turning Point of ‘Fellow Travelers’

    Inside the Heartbreaking Turning Point of ‘Fellow Travelers’

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    Spoiler warning for Fellow Travelers’ fifth episode, “Promise You Won’t Write.”

    The epic love story of Fellow Travelers reaches a wrenching turning point in its fifth episode, now streaming on Paramount+ With Showtime. Hawkins “Hawk” Fuller (Matt Bomer) and Tim Laughlin (Jonathan Bailey), closeted political staffers working in McCarthy-Era Washington, find their passionate, at times fraught romantic affair suddenly untenable as the cultural circumstances surrounding them intensify. Hawk is compelled to commit to a romance he doesn’t believe in with Lucy Smith (Allison Williams), daughter of the senator to whom Hawk has dedicated his career, after tragedy strikes and the family breaks apart. Tim’s allegiance to Senator Joseph McCarthy (Chris Bauer) finally, firmly cracks as he sees the demagogue’s methods for what they are, just as the Lavender Scare reaches its apex.

    The episode’s title, “Promise You Won’t Write,” comes from one of the episode’s last lines, and is drawn straight from the novel by Thomas Mallon, the loose basis for the show. It captures the longing our lovelorn heroes are left with. Tim joins the military. Hawk gets engaged to a woman. Their story ends here, for now—a choice creator Ron Nyswaner made by situating their separation in a juicy political context, against the backdrop of the downfall of McCarthy at his Senate censure hearing and a similar moment of reckoning for Roy Cohn (Will Brill), both stories of which were pulled from the public historical record. Nyswaner puts down his artistic stamp by unifying all of these tales—plus that of fictional Black journalist Marcus Hooks (Jelani Alladin) as he embarks on his own new path—under the harrowingly wide cloud of homophobia. In Fellow Travelers, as in the U.S. circa 1954, no one could escape it; its impact could be life-or-death.

    In an exclusive breakdown of the end of Fellow Travelers’ time in the ‘50s, Nyswaner discusses his various storylines coming to a head at his series’s midpoint—as he gets ready to hurtle the action decades into the future.

    **Vanity Fair: **This is a real narrative turning point and marks the end of the McCarthy era for the show. Why now?

    Ron Nyswaner: The Army-McCarthy hearings are a very important part of the story, because it is where Joe McCarthy’s career comes to a crashing end. It just naturally seemed to fall here. I could develop the McCarthy/Cohn/Schine story through the first four episodes to this climactic point. Then it seemed, if that’s going to be that climax, it felt natural that this is where Tim sees who his hero really is—well, but not just one hero, but who both of his heroes really are. Hawk reveals himself to Tim in a way that is disturbing to him; McCarthy reveals himself to Tim in a way that is really disturbing to him. That leaves Tim, as he says—he’s lost. Then he joins the Army.

    In all of the episode’s stories, this mere threat of outing informs seismic character changes, from Hawk to McCarthy to Cohn. It’s obviously a statement for the show as a whole and this era you’re working in. Can you just talk a little bit about understanding the sheer significance of that kind of threat coming to a head for characters here?

    The Army-McCarthy hearings took place over weeks and weeks and weeks. The amount of transcripts are huge, but going into the research I really saw the very thing that you mentioned. You can look at the end of Joseph McCarthy’s career in those hearings as caused by homophobia. I actually think we make a good case for it.

    A lot of people think of it as a moment we didn’t include, when Joseph Welch pounds his fist on the table and says, “Have you no decency, sir?” Like, at long last tapping into decency, and boom, that was it, McCarthy was over. I’m not alone, as there is a McCarthy biographer who agrees with me, but to me the moment was when the words “pixie and fairy” are introduced into the dialogue and are pointed right at McCarthy and Cohn. From the story that we’re telling, that was the natural climax of our show, because this demagogue who was the second most powerful person in the United States is brought down in flames, so to speak, by being painted with the gay brush. It destroyed his career. What I loved, and I twist it from the book, is that it was homosexuals in the show—Hawk and Tim; Tim unwittingly, Hawk wittingly—who bring down McCarthy and Cohn with homophobia. That great irony.

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    David Canfield

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  • PolitiFact – Fact-checking 3 claims in Tucker Carlson’s show on trans health care

    PolitiFact – Fact-checking 3 claims in Tucker Carlson’s show on trans health care

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    Since his firing from Fox News, former primetime host Tucker Carlson has taken his show on the digital road — to X, where he has interviewed public figures such as former President Donald Trump and independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr

    On Oct. 4, Carlson released an episode titled “Trans, Inc” that focused on gender-affirming health care provided to transgender people.

    “Genital mutilation is not just a fad. It’s a full-blown industry,” read the caption on Carlson’s X post sharing the episode. The 48-minute video criticized aspects of transgender health care, such as hormones, surgery and social affirmation. It describes “transgenderism” as “unnatural” and “demented,” comparing it with “human sacrifice.” Carlson could not be reached for comment. 

    In the video, Carlson interviewed Chris Mortiz, whom Carlson introduced as a “policy guy” who has “taken a close forensic look at where the money is coming from.” From his limited online presence, we found that Moritz has worked as a lawyer, investment banker and consultant. Mortiz did not respond to our requests for comment. 

    The video included some claims we have fact-checked before. But here are three new assertions involving hormone treatments, gender-affirming surgeries and the trans health care market. 

    Moritz: “With respect to the transgender pharmaceuticals, there are no long-term studies, peer-reviewed, that show the efficacy or not of taking these very powerful pharmaceuticals.”

    Moritz’s description of a total lack of research is inaccurate. The Endocrine Society’s Clinical Practice Guidelines state, “Prior to 1975, few peer-reviewed articles were published concerning endocrine treatment of transgender persons. Since then, more than two thousand articles about various aspects of transgender care have appeared.”

    PolitiFact found several published and peer-reviewed studies examining the long-term effects and efficacy of cross-sex hormone treatment on bone health, cardiovascular risk, mortality, psychosocial functioning and more. There is enough research that we found systematic reviews — analyses of large numbers of individual research studies —  on specific aspects of treatment like bone health.

    Although adolescent treatment for gender dysphoria started only in the late 1990s, transgender adults have received hormonal treatment and sex reassignment surgery since the early 1970s

    Additionally, people who aren’t transgender, including men with low testosterone and women in menopause, sometimes rely on hormone therapy. 

    “Hormone therapy for transgender males and females confers many of the same risks associated with sex hormone replacement therapy in nontransgender persons,” the Endocrine Society’s Clinical Practice Guidelines say. 

    The guideline outlines safe dosages and provides guidance for how physicians should monitor for potential adverse effects.

    Carlson: “I haven’t heard anybody mention female genital mutilation in the United States in quite some time now. Is that because we now officially engage in it?” 

    Female genital mutilation is a nonconsensual procedure that can include the partial or total removal of the clitoris, labia minora or the narrowing of the vaginal opening. The World Health Organization said it is mostly forced on girls younger than 15. More than 200 million women have been affected in 30 countries in Africa, Asia and the Middle East.

    The procedure aims to reduce or eliminate sexual function and pleasure. It is widely considered a human rights violation.

    Dr. Marci Bowers, a gynecological surgeon who does gender-affirming genital surgeries and restorative surgeries for female genital mutilation survivors, told PolitiFact that gender-affirming surgeries do not amount to genital mutilation — the two are entirely different.

    “Transgender surgery is done with full consent of the individual,” Bowers said.

    Female genital mutilation is usually forced on girls younger than 15 in nonmedical and unsterile conditions. Gender-affirming surgeries, however, are performed in hospitals by trained professionals, and are rarely performed on people younger than 18, said Bowers, president of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health. When gender-affirming surgery is performed on minors, it is “only under the most severe conditions of gender dysphoria,” she said.

    Bowers also noted the difference in how the two procedures affect women’s sexual functionality — such as the ability to have sensation or orgasm. Gender-affirming surgeries “are generally quite elegant surgeries that leave the individual fully functional versus (female genital mutilation), which robs a woman of functionality,” she said.

    Mariya Taher, co-founder of Sahiyo, an organization working in Asia to end female genital mutilation, agreed with Bowers. Taher told PolitiFact her organization “strongly” believes that gender-affirming health care does not equate to genital mutilation.

    “We are saddened to see the two issues are being conflated” and that female genital mutilation “is being used as a guise to target and harm trans youth and gender-diverse individuals” Taher said.

    Additionally, representatives from the End FGM network in both the U.S. and Europe told PolitiFact that female genital mutilation and gender-affirming surgeries are not the same.

    Moritz: “The combined value sales of sex reassignment surgeries and pharmaceutical products in 2018 was $2.94 billion. By 2022, that figure had rose to $4.18 billion.” 

    We are unsure how Moritz arrived at those numbers; he offered no evidence backing them up and did not answer our inquiries. 

    We found a few publicly available market research reports, which are often commissioned by investors deciding whether to invest in a given industry. But it is difficult to assess the reliability of these reports without knowing the methodology behind them, and estimates can vary widely, said experts.

    Carlson made a broader assertion that profits are driving transgender health care: “Transgenderism, it didn’t happen by accident,” he said. “Some people are profiting from it.”  

    None of the 2022 reports we found for the U.S. market added up to $4.18 billion, but some got close. Grand View Research, for example, values the U.S. sex reassignment hormone therapy market at $1.6 billion and the U.S. sex reassignment surgical market at $2.1 billion in 2022. 

    These values can be calculated using a combination of insurance data, federal and state data, and information directly from medical providers, explained Stephen Parente, professor of finance at the University of Minnesota Carlson School of Management. But for procedures not reimbursed by insurance, getting accurate estimates might prove more challenging. Coverage of health care services for transgender people can differ by state and health plan, according to HealthCare.gov.

    “Most types of health care, including gender affirming care, involve multiple types of providers of goods and services — e.g., drugs, visits, procedures, hospital stays, etc.” said Melinda Buntin, health economist and professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “For this reason, it is hard to assess how much is spent on specific categories of care in sum.”

    The market size can vary depending on what is included in a given estimate, said Supriya Munshaw, associate professor at Johns Hopkins Carey School of Business. Is it just surgery or is the hospital stay included? What about complications? How do they determine what mastectomies are gender-affirming and which are done for breast cancer?

    “How are you actually calculating the number?” said Munshaw. “It might differ in different research reports.”

    The U.S. health care market is large to begin with, totaling $4.3 trillion in 2021, according to federal data on national health expenditures. A market of billions is a “sizable market” from an investment perspective, Munshaw said, but “it doesn’t mean that if something is profitable that the healthcare industry is pushing it.”

    PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.

    CORRECTION, Nov. 15, 2023: Melinda Buntin is health economist and professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Her name was misspelled in an earlier version of this story.

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  • Hulu Doc Zooms In On LGBTQ+ Families Proud To Call America’s Heartland Home

    Hulu Doc Zooms In On LGBTQ+ Families Proud To Call America’s Heartland Home

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    For decades, major cities like New York and San Francisco have been seen as safe and supportive environments for the LGBTQ+ community. A new documentary, however, is about to take an in-depth look at the queer folks who have chosen to live outside of those urban bubbles, and the challenges they’ve faced in doing so.

    On Thursday, Hulu unveiled an emotional trailer for “We Live Here: The Midwest.” Directed by Melinda Maerker, the film is billed as “an authentic portrait of courageous families in America’s heartland,” and is due out Dec. 6.

    Among those profiled in “We Live Here: The Midwest” are a trans/queer family with five children in Iowa who have been expelled from their church, a gay Black couple and their young daughter in Nebraska, and a lesbian couple who reside on a farm in Kansas, where they’ve chosen to home-school their son after he was subjected to bullying.

    Watch a trailer for “We Live Here: The Midwest” below.

    “The students believe that nonbinary people do not exist,” one of the film’s young subjects says in the trailer. “I’m here right now, so we do exist.”

    “We’re altering what defines a nuclear family,” adds another subject.

    Also featured in the film is Minnesota state Rep. Heather Keeler, who addresses the death threats she says that she’s faced as an Indigenous queer woman in politics.

    Speaking to People in an interview published Thursday, Maerker said she wanted to shine a light on the Midwest because it’s “really the heart of family values.”

    Hulu’s “We Live Here: The Midwest” is set to be released Dec. 6.

    Producer David Miller, who is married to “Glee” and “American Horror Story” creator Ryan Murphy, echoed Maerker while stressing the importance of showing how queer families live.

    “I was obviously very happy with gay marriage passing in the Supreme Court [in 2015],” Miller told People. But 2016 — the year of Donald Trump’s victory in the U.S. presidential election — offered a stark reminder of the anti-LGBTQ+ sentiment that still prevails across much of the country, he said.

    The release of “We Live Here: The Midwest” feels auspiciously timed, given the surge of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation in many conservative states.

    Yet, as one of the film’s subjects explains in the trailer, even those residing in more accepting places shouldn’t take their safety for granted: “It does feel like at any moment, anywhere, it could change.”

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  • 1 Of America’s Largest LGBTQ+ Youth Orgs Is Leaving Twitter

    1 Of America’s Largest LGBTQ+ Youth Orgs Is Leaving Twitter

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    One of the largest mental health organizations serving LGBTQ+ youth is leaving X, the social media service formerly known as Twitter.

    The Trevor Project announced Thursday that the nonprofit is closing its account on X, citing “increasing hate and vitriol… targeting the LGBTQ community.”

    “LGBTQ young people are regularly victimized at the expense of their mental health, and X’s removal of certain moderation functions makes it more difficult for us to create a welcoming space for them on this platform,” the nonprofit said in a statement on the platform.

    The Trevor Project noted that it will maintain a presence on Instagram, TikTok, Facebook and LinkedIn.

    Over the past two decades, the Trevor Project has provided a 24-hour crisis line and a social network for LGBTQ+ people between the ages of 13 and 24.

    Stakes are “just too high” for the group to continue its relationship with X, a spokesperson for the organization told HuffPost. The spokesperson noted that 41% of LGBTQ+ young people have seriously considered suicide, and that the figures are even higher for trans and nonbinary youth, as well as youth of color.

    “The content we share on social media is intended to uplift and affirm LGBTQ young people, shedding light on stories to deepen public understanding of their experiences,” the spokesperson wrote. “In response to mental health resources and messages of hope and support, we’ve seen anti-LGBTQ rhetoric and commentary on our posts that can negatively impact LGBTQ young people.”

    Last year, Tesla CEO Elon Musk bought the social media company, at the time known as Twitter, and claimed the platform would prioritize “free speech.” He has since received heavy criticism from watchdog groups for failing to moderate hate speech against the LGBTQ+ community, as well as racist, antisemitic and other “extreme hate speech,” according to a report from the Center for Countering Digital Hate.

    The platform has become a haven for accounts promoting hateful content and false information about queer and trans communities. In April, Musk quietly removed parts of X’s hateful conduct policy that protected users against misgendering or deadnaming. The billionaire has also promoted “What is a Woman?” ― a documentary by Daily Wire contributor Matt Walsh that attempts to cast doubt on the existence of trans people.

    More recently, the conservative advocacy group Prager University Foundation spent $1 million on a day-long takeover of X to promote its film “Detrans: The Dangers of Gender Affirming Care,” which has been criticized as a misleading treatment of the subject (and which Ian Kumamoto, writing for HuffPost’s opinion section, called “pure anti-trans propaganda”).

    The Trevor Project said that the proliferation of anti-LGBTQ+ content on X, as well as the rise of legislation targeting queer and trans youths’ access to gender-affirming health care and participation in school activities, has made the platform an unwelcoming environment for LGBTQ+ young people. Statehouses across the country have introduced a record number of anti-LGBTQ+ bills this year, prompting the Human Right Campaign to declare a “state of emergency” for the LGBTQ+ community this summer.

    The Trevor Project is one of dozens of organizations, including multiple groups focused on the LGBTQ+ community, that have left the platform under Musk’s leadership.

    This past spring, 29 LGBTQ+ community centers across the country deactivated their X accounts, calling on the social media network to do more to protect its users from hate speech.

    “Twitter has become increasingly unsafe in recent months for LGBTQ and BIPOC people with anti-LGBTQ, anti-trans, anti-Black and anti-semitic tweets on the rise,” Denise Spivak, the CEO of CenterLink, an international nonprofit network of hundreds of LGBTQ+ organizations, told Mashable at the time.

    If you or someone you know needs help, call or text 988 or chat 988lifeline.org for mental health support. Additionally, you can find local mental health and crisis resources at dontcallthepolice.com. Outside of the U.S., please visit the International Association for Suicide Prevention.

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  • Leader of Israel’s Labor: Something is ‘very wrong’ on the global left

    Leader of Israel’s Labor: Something is ‘very wrong’ on the global left

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    MÁLAGA, Spain — The leader of Israel’s center-left Labor Party says something has gone “very wrong” with the political left around the world, with supposed progressives now aligning themselves with Islamist militants who oppose the rights of women and LGBTQ+ people.

    Over a month after Hamas militants attacked Israel, killing about 1,200 people and captured some 240, Israeli officials revised their death toll downwards as Israel wages a retaliatory war against Hamas in Gaza, which has now killed more than 11,000 Palestinians — according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

    Mass protests have been held in cities across the EU and U.S. calling for an immediate cease-fire, with many using the slogan “from the river to the sea,” regarded by many Jews and Israelis as a call for the annihilation of the state of Israel but by Palestinians and their supporters as a non-violent rallying cry against the occupation.

    At the protests and on university campuses, some protestors describing themselves as left-wing have expressed support for Hamas — proscribed as a terror organization by the U.S., EU and U.K. Tensions in the left-wing camp have already boiled over in France and Britain. The far-left France Unbowed party led by Jean-Luc Mélenchon, for example, avoids describing Hamas as terrorists and was the only major political party not to attend a rally against rising antisemitism last weekend. Meanwhile, Keir Starmer, the U.K. Labour Party leader, has been pummelled by the left of his party for refusing to call for a cease-fire.

    “I think something very bad is happening on the left,” Labor leader Merav Michaeli told POLITICO in an interview. “It became very, very clear in this attack that people who consider themselves to be democratic, progressive, are supporting a totalitarian terror regime that oppresses women [and] the LGBTQ+ community,” she said on the fringes of an international meeting of Socialist and social democrat parties in Spain.

    Some politicians on the far left have primarily blamed Israel for the the latest cycle of violence.

    “The more you go to the left, the more there’s a big mix-up. Something went very wrong on the way,” Michaeli told POLITICO, adding that Israel has some “very strong allies” on the center-left.

    “I fail to see how shouting jihad and calling for a mass murder of Jews is pro-Palestinian,” she added. “It’s important for me to emphasize to them that when you do not very strongly go against Hamas, and what it does in Gaza including to its own people, you are complicit.” 

    Israel has imposed a total siege on Gaza, allowing only a trickle of humanitarian aid into the densely-inhabited territory and obliging hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to move south to escape daily bombardments.

    Michaeli, a transport minister in the previous Israeli government, is a long-time critic of Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, who is leading a far-right coalition and formed a war cabinet with centrist Benny Gantz after October 7. Michaeli called during the interview for Netanyahu to “go now.”

    But she also sought to focus attention on the trauma suffered by Israeli society in the wake of the October 7 attacks.

    “When I’m speaking to people outside of Israel, then they need to understand that even the biggest peace activists and even the biggest believers in the two state solutions are now under a horrible attack,” she said.

    Protesters demand immediate ceasefire in Gaza at Place de la Republique in Brussels | John Thys/AFP via Getty Images

    Labor and its antecedent political movements dominated Israeli politics for some 30 years after the birth of the nation in 1948, with members including such prominent politicians as Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres and Ehud Barak. But as Israel shifted to the right, Labor was sidelined as a political force, with now only four members – including Michaeli herself — in the 120-seat Knesset.

    “The way to rebuild Israel is to take it back,” she said, before correcting herself: “It’s not even back, it’s to put it on the Zionist democratic, liberal path.” Michaeli explained that this means pushing for a two-state solution as outlined under the Oslo accords that Rabin, her predecessor as Labor Party leader, negotiated in the 1990s.

    Cease-fire divisions

    At the meeting in Spain, calls by some national parties from countries such as France, Ireland and Belgium for a cease-fire in Gaza divided delegates and did not make it into the final agreed text. The left more broadly has been rocked by divisions over how to respond to the war in Gaza.

    Michaeli, whose party is a mere observer to the Party of European Socialists, could not directly negotiate the final text that was agreed upon in Málaga.

    But she said: “[Calling for a] cease-fire now is giving permission to Hamas to continue rearming itself, continue stealing food, water, medicine and fuel from its own people and yes, rebasing itself.” She suggested that calls for a cease-fire were being influenced by “PR” for Hamas.

    She put the blame for thousands of civilian deaths in Gaza on Hamas, rather than on the Israeli army, whose actions she defended.

    “They are dying because Hamas is using them as human shields, because they have based everything from equipment to missiles to their headquarters in the midst of the most civilian functions there are,” Michaeli said.

    She criticized what she perceived as a lack of support among EU politicians to push for the release of some 240 hostages kidnapped by Hamas. “I would have loved to hear more about that than just a mention, at least as much as they’re talking about the humanitarian needs in Gaza,” she said.

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  • Liberals Win A Majority In Battleground Virginia School Board Race

    Liberals Win A Majority In Battleground Virginia School Board Race

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    Liberal candidates in the Loudoun County, Virginia, school board race have secured a victory in the battleground county that has become a culture war hot spot. Liberals now have a 6-seat majority on the nine-seat board.

    The liberal candidates focused on Loudoun County’s reputation as a nationally recognized school system, championing its diversity and equity plans and shying away from weighing into the conservative culture wars that appear to be sweeping school boards nationwide.

    The Loudoun County School Board is tasked with overseeing 98 schools that serve more than 82,000 students on matters ranging from approving the curriculum, setting policies, hiring a superintendent and setting strategic goals for the entire school system. Though the school board race is technically nonpartisan, candidates usually win endorsements from either Republican or Democratic groups. All nine seats were up for grabs with only two incumbents running.

    Loudoun County, about an hour outside of Washington, D.C., became a notable culture war battleground in 2021 after several contentious school board meetings garnered attention from right-wing pundits and media outlets.

    That year, a pair of campus sexual assaults at the district high school, both allegedly perpetrated by the same student, prompted false claims that the suspect was transgender. There’s no evidence that this was true, but conservative parents nevertheless began accusing school board members who supported LGBTQ-inclusive policies of failing to protect their children.

    Conservatives also accused Loudoun County schools of teaching critical race theory, a college-level discipline that investigates the role racism plays in social and government policy.

    Since then, the county has become a poster child for the ongoing battle over the control of America’s public schools, including debates over so-called parental rights, what educators are allowed to teach, LGBTQ+ issues, and pandemic policies. Local school board meetings and policies have made multiple headlines at conservative publications like Fox News and The Daily Caller.

    The political climate surrounding school board elections has become so contentious that some potential candidates opted out of running.

    After seeing other wonderful possible candidates choose not to run for School Board specifically because they were afraid of that very hostility,” Anne Donohue, a candidate for the at-large district, told the Loudoun Times-Mirror in October, “I felt it was necessary to stand up and say we will not be scared or threatened into silence in the face of attitudes and priorities that do not better the lives of our children or represent the values and morals of the majority of our community.”

    Virginia’s Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin credited his own 2021 election victory to a campaign focusing on parental rights. He’s since pursued book bans and policies attacking the rights of LGBTQ+ students, including regulations policing students’ bathroom use. In subsequent elections in Virginia and nationwide, Republican candidates have sought to replicate Youngkin’s results with varying degrees of success.

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  • ‘Fellow Travelers’ Has Lots Of Hot Sex, But Its Take On LGBTQ+ History Is Vital, Too

    ‘Fellow Travelers’ Has Lots Of Hot Sex, But Its Take On LGBTQ+ History Is Vital, Too

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    Robbie Rogers doesn’t mind if viewers tune in to “Fellow Travelers” simply to catch the show’s much-buzzed-about sex scenes.

    The political thriller series, which premiered on Showtime last week, stars Jonathan Bailey and Matt Bomer as two gay men who have steamy romps in remote cabins and swanky apartments, as well as on a sun-drenched Fire Island beach, over the course of eight episodes. Among the more titillating moments is a toe-sucking scene that makes other on-screen portrayals of same-sex love, like “Brokeback Mountain” and “Call Me by Your Name,” seem chaste by comparison.

    But Rogers, an executive producer on “Fellow Travelers,” is hopeful audiences will take time to contemplate the rich, LGBTQ-inclusive history that the show depicts, too.

    “For a lot of people, the LGBTQ+ community started with Stonewall, and that’s actually not correct,” the former athlete told HuffPost. “There are other stories and other uprisings and other marches that we should be exploring and talking about and be aware of. It takes some effort beyond what’s being taught in schools.”

    Jonathan Bailey, left, and Matt Bomer, right, in Showtime’s “Fellow Travelers.”

    Ben Mark Holzberg/Showtime

    Based on Thomas Mallon’s 2007 novel, “Fellow Travelers” follows a decadeslong romance between a newly minted college graduate, Tim Laughlin (played by Bailey) and a State Department official, Hawkins “Hawk” Fuller (Bomer). Their relationship begins in secret during the anti-LGBTQ “Lavender Scare” of the 1950s, during which thousands of U.S. government employees lost their jobs because of their sexuality or gender identity, and continues through the HIV/AIDS epidemic of the ’80s.

    In addition to Bailey and Bomer, the show’s cast includes Allison Williams as Lucy Smith, a senator’s daughter who becomes Hawk’s wife, and Jelani Alladin as Marcus Hooks, a Black political journalist whose love interest is a drag queen, Frankie Hines (Noah J. Ricketts).

    Rogers said he first picked up Mallon’s book at the suggestion of series showrunner Ron Nyswaner, with whom he worked on the 2022 film “My Policeman.” There were elements of the novel that reminded him of his own trajectory as a professional soccer player who, in 2013, became the first openly gay athlete in a major U.S. sport. Mostly, he found himself rapt by the forbidden love story at its center.

    From left, "Fellow Travelers" stars Matt Bomer, Jonathan Bailey, Allison Williams, Jelani Alladin and Noah J. Ricketts.
    From left, “Fellow Travelers” stars Matt Bomer, Jonathan Bailey, Allison Williams, Jelani Alladin and Noah J. Ricketts.

    “I’m very lucky to be a gay man in this time, and I’d never want to compare my time as a soccer player to the ’50s,” Rogers said. “But as a gay man in sports, I felt like an outsider my whole life. Professional sports have been incredibly homophobic in the past, and you’re scared you’ll be outed and that your teammates who’ve become your family won’t embrace you anymore.”

    He continued: “I’m interested in history when the stakes were high. I knew nothing about the Lavender Scare ― obviously, I knew bits and pieces about the AIDS epidemic ― but I loved the idea of telling a love story when it’s dangerous for two men to love each other.”

    Rogers said he and Nyswaner approached Bomer for the role of Hawk almost immediately. As for Bailey, the “Bridgerton” actor had remained on the producers’ minds after trying out for a role in “My Policeman.”

    Given the shifting time frames and varied locations, “Fellow Travelers” presented its creative team with a fair share of challenges. But as for those sex scenes, Rogers said he and the rest of the creative team “never set out to be salacious or push the envelope.”

    A scene from the new Showtime series, "Fellow Travelers."
    A scene from the new Showtime series, “Fellow Travelers.”

    Ben Mark Holzberg/Showtime

    “When you’re dealing with internalized homophobia, religion and other things that are very oppressive … if you’re able to express yourself through sex and through love, it can be very, very emotional,” he explained. “These sex scenes are very much about power.”

    Though he’s best known for his years as an athlete, Rogers is no novice to television production. He and husband Greg Berlanti ― the Emmy-nominated screenwriter and director whose Hollywood résumé includes “Dawson’s Creek” and the 2018 film “Love, Simon” ― shared producing duties on the 2018 series, “All American.”

    But Rogers is especially hopeful that the success of “Fellow Travelers” will pave the way for future projects. At present, his goals include bringing a queer story set in the world of professional sports to the screen.

    “I lived in that world for so long, and I’d love to figure out a way to tell that story and tell it in a big way,” he said. “Maybe it’s a biopic, or maybe it’s taking bits and pieces of different people’s stories. Obviously, there aren’t many gay athletes, and I’d love to give people an insight into what that world looks like and why it’s still so difficult for athletes to come out and continue to play.”

    Watch the trailer for “Fellow Travelers” below.

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  • Gay Games Kick Off in Hong Kong as Asia Hosts for First Time

    Gay Games Kick Off in Hong Kong as Asia Hosts for First Time

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    HONG KONG — Football enthusiast Gina Benjamin is not just training for victory in the upcoming Gay Games in Hong Kong, but she’s also on a mission to help push for legal reform for same-sex marriage.

    After moving to Hong Kong from Britain in 2016, Benjamin, 33, met her true love in the semi-autonomous southern Chinese city. But local laws, recognizing only heterosexual marriages, forced the couple to travel to the British Embassy in Vietnam to get married in August. Their inability to marry in the city where their love story unfolded left her frustrated.

    This weekend the drama teacher along with diverse teams of male, female and transgender players will take to the pitch with what she calls “a big purpose.” She hopes participation in the games can show the government the city’s strong support for equal rights for same-sex couples.

    “We’re playing to possibly change laws,” she said.

    Set to begin on Friday, the first Gay Games in Asia are fostering hopes for wider LGBTQ+ inclusion in the regional financial hub, following recent court wins in favor of equality for same-sex couples and transgender people.

    Read More: He Won a Landmark Trans Rights Case in Hong Kong—But His Work Is Just Beginning

    After a year’s delay due to the pandemic, the nine-day event will host about 2,400 participants from some 40 territories. They will compete in a range of games, from tennis and swimming to culturally rich activities like dragon boat racing and mahjong.

    Lisa Lam, co-chair of the Gay Games, said LGBTQ+ acceptance in Asia is still lower than in the rest of the world and that it’s important to make sexual minorities visible in the community.

    “Biases come from misunderstanding or stereotypes,” Lam said. “Bringing different people together, you are able to break down stereotypes.”

    But organizers have faced various challenges since winning the bid to host the games in 2017.

    The opportunity to grow Hong Kong’s reputation as an inclusive international financial hub did not draw much support from the government. Some lawmakers have even attacked the games, with one suggesting it could pose a threat to national security.

    The scale of the event also falls short of the organizers’ original goals set in 2016. They had aimed to attract 15,000 participants and inject 1 billion Hong Kong dollars (US$128 million) into the economy.

    The COVID-19 pandemic is largely to blame for its downsize. As Hong Kong grappled with the uncertainty of when stringent quarantine rules for travelers would be eased, Guadalajara in Mexico was named as a co-host for the games.

    Read More: How COVID-19 Derailed the 2022 Gay Games Before They Even Began

    With a closer option available, many individuals from Europe and America opted not to undertake the lengthy journey to Hong Kong, Lam said. The high costs associated with long-haul flights and hotel accommodations in the post-pandemic era also deterred many potential visitors, she added.

    Others are hesitant to visit due to the risks posed by a Beijing-imposed national security law that has jailed and silenced many activists following 2019 pro-democracy protests. Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory, will not send a delegation to Hong Kong out of safety concerns.

    But equality advocate Jerome Yau was optimistic that the community would still appreciate how the games promote LGBTQ+ dialogue. It can take time for people to fully realize the legacy of an event, said the co-founder of non-governmental organization Hong Kong Marriage Equality.

    LGBTQ+ activism is a rare spot that is still making considerable progress in Hong Kong under a government crackdown on its civil society.

    Read More: ‘It’s So Much Worse Than Anyone Expected’: Why Hong Kong’s National Security Law Is Having Such a Chilling Effect

    Over the past year, the city’s courts have ruled that full sex reassignment surgery should not be a prerequisite for transgender people to have their gender changed on their official identity cards and backed the granting of equal housing and inheritance rights for same-sex couples married overseas. Hong Kong is now moving toward a framework for recognizing same-sex partnerships following a landmark ruling in September. All these wins were brought by legal challenges launched by members of the LGBTQ+ community amid growing social acceptance of same-sex marriage.

    Suen Yiu-tung, a gender studies professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, acknowledged the positive progress but said Hong Kong’s LGBTQ+ development remains uneven because other areas have not advanced much. Suen pointed out that discrimination based on sexual orientation is still legal in the private sector, and that a report from a 2017 public consultation on legal gender recognition has yet to be released.

    While government policies may take years to fully incorporate equal rights, many members of the LGBTQ+ community are proactively seizing every opportunity to drive small changes. Hundreds of volunteers have helped to build the Gay Games.

    Emery Fung, a 29-year-old founder of a diversity and inclusion consultancy, is one of them. He helped set up all-gender toilets for participants and arrange some contests to allow people of different genders to play together — breaking from the tradition of conventional sporting events, which typically segregate players by sex.

    “I hope that ultimately, there will be a day people won’t need to specifically state what kind of person I am or what kind of person you are, we just all live together,” he said.

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  • Mass Arrests Target LGBTQ+ People In Nigeria As LGBTQ Abuses Are Ignored, Activists Say

    Mass Arrests Target LGBTQ+ People In Nigeria As LGBTQ Abuses Are Ignored, Activists Say

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    ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — Law enforcement authorities in Nigeria are using the country’s same-sex prohibition law to target the LGBTQ+ community while ignoring abuses against them, rights groups and lawyers say, in the wake of fresh mass arrests of gay people.

    Nigeria is one of more than 30 of Africa’s 54 countries where homosexuality is criminalized in laws that are broadly supported by the public, even though the constitution guarantees freedom from discrimination, and the right to private and family life.

    Mass arrests and detention of queer Nigerians that continued this week were done without proper investigations and could further expose them to danger amid the anti-LGBTQ+ sentiments in Africa’s most populous country, rights groups said.

    The country’s paramilitary agency on Monday announced the arrest of more than 70 young people – 59 men and 17 women – in the northern Gombe state, accusing them of “holding homosexual birthdays” and having “the intention to hold a same-sex marriage.”

    Following a similar detention of more than 60 people at what the police called a gay wedding in the southern Delta state in August, the arrests show “an uptick in this trend of witchhunt and gross violation of human rights” of the individuals, Isa Sanusi, director of Amnesty International Nigeria, told The Associated Press.

    The arrests also suggest states are emulating one another “to get accolades” under the law, according to Anietie Ewang, Nigerian researcher with the Human Rights Watch’s Africa Division. She said concerns highlighted by the organization in a 2016 report — about the abuse and stigma that gay people face in Nigeria — have remained.

    Nigeria’s Same Sex Marriage Prohibition Act of 2013, which has been condemned internationally but is supported by many in the country of more than 210 million people, punishes gay marriage with up to 14 years in prison and has forced many Nigerian gays to flee the country, according to human rights activists.

    Arrests under the law have been common since it came into effect but the largest mass detentions yet have been in recent weeks in which some of the suspects were falsely accused and subjected to inhumane conditions, according to lawyers and rights groups.

    After dozens were arrested at what the police called a gay wedding in a Delta state hotel, the suspects were paraded in front of cameras in a live social media broadcast despite a ruling by a Nigerian high court last year that pretrial media parades violate the nation’s constitution.

    One of those paraded said he was at the hotel for another engagement. Another suspect said he does not identify as a gay individual and was arrested while on his way to a fashion show.

    In Gombe, where the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) said its personnel arrested people who “intended” to organize a gay wedding, the prime suspect identified as Bashir Sani denied the allegation.

    “There was no wedding, only birthday,” he said in a broadcast aired by local media.

    Among those arrested were the photographer and the disc jockey at the event, Ochuko Ohimor, the suspects’ lawyer, told The Associated Press.

    It is part of a trend that shows how the anti-gay law is being “exploited” without due process, said Okechukwu Nwanguma, who leads the Rule of Law and Accountability Advocacy Centre, which advocates for police reforms in Nigeria.

    One evidence of such a flawed process, lawyers said, is the failed trial of the 47 men arrested in 2018 and charged with public displays of affection for members of same sex at a hotel in Lagos. A local court dismissed the case in 2020 because of what it described as the “lack of diligent prosecution” after the police failed to present some witnesses.

    “They (law enforcement authorities) are exploiting the law to target people whether or not they are queer … There is a tendency to target them based on assumptions or allegations, not based on any investigation,” said Nwanguma.

    Such blanket arrests and media parade are not only discriminatory but also pose a high risk of further endangering people for their real or perceived sexual or gender orientation, said Amnesty International’s Sanusi.

    “Since the signing of Same Sex Prohibition Act into law in 2014 attacks, harassment, blackmail and extortion of the LGBTQ+ community is rising, at disturbing speed. The Nigeria Police should be prioritizing keeping everyone safe, not stoking more discrimination,” he said.

    Police spokespersons at the Nigeria Police Force headquarters and at the Delta state command did not respond to enquiries from the AP to speak on the arrests and on the allegations about the lack of due process in handling such cases.

    Lawyers also spoke to the AP about instances where the police failed to act in handling cases of abuse against the LGBTQ+ community in Nigeria.

    In 2020, David Bakare, a gay person, petitioned the police about a group of men who beat him up after he shared a video of himself dancing. The suspects were freed on bail after which they continued to threaten Bakare to withdraw the petition, a copy of which his lawyer shared with The AP.

    Bakare then petitioned the police a second time to alert them that his life is in danger but no action was taken in response, he said. He had no choice but to flee to another part of Lagos.

    “Since you can’t trust the police to do the necessary things, those guys will come again,” the 26-year-old said of his abusers.

    The problem of delayed justice is not new in Nigeria where the criminal justice system has been criticized as corrupt. But it is far worse for groups such as the LGBTQ+ community seen to be vulnerable, said Chizelu Emejulu, an activist and lawyer who has handled many cases involving queer people.

    “When we get the perpetrators arrested, the consistent thing we have noticed is that people always claim their victims are queer and once they say that, the police begin to withdraw from these cases,” said Emejulu.

    “What the LGBTQ community in Nigeria is asking for is to be left alone to live their lives,” Emejulu added.

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  • Great American Family CEO Has Disappointing Response To Candace Cameron Bure Backlash

    Great American Family CEO Has Disappointing Response To Candace Cameron Bure Backlash

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    The CEO of Great American Family has made an effort to distance the network from Candace Cameron Bure’s controversial claims regarding LGBTQ+ content, but nonetheless stopped short of a complete rebuttal.

    Bure in 2022 left the Hallmark Channel, where she’d appeared in numerous films for more than a decade, to join Great American Family as its chief creative officer. In a November interview with The Wall Street Journal discussing her new position, she said the network’s emphasis on “traditional marriage” meant that viewers shouldn’t expect to see LGBTQ+ storylines in its movies.

    The “Full House” star’s comments were swiftly condemned by fellow actors as well as LGBTQ+ advocacy groups. Speaking to Variety in an interview published Wednesday, Great American Family CEO Bill Abbott emphasized that Bure was “not speaking on behalf of” the network in her Wall Street Journal chat.

    “In terms of her personal views, it’s like the disclaimer you see at the end of a movie or a series that says, ‘The views reflected here are not necessarily those of the company,’” he said.

    But when asked if LGBTQ+ storylines and same-sex relationships would, in fact, be featured on the network, Abbott said that was a “very good and fair question” but nonetheless remained vague.

    Great American Family CEO Bill Abbott, left, and Candace Cameron Bure.

    Alberto E. Rodriguez via Getty Images

    “I don’t think when we set out to do any type of movie we cast it first,” he said. “The first thing we think about is a great storyline or great characters or an emotional journey. We’re not seeking to do anything or not do anything, and we take every day as it comes.”

    He went on to note: “We don’t have an agenda either way. It’s not in the faith-and-family playbook to have agendas that are either pro or anti. We want to entertain and inspire and be uplifting and consistently provide an experience that is high quality — that is our most important objective.”

    Whether Abbott’s attempt to clarify his network’s position on LGBTQ+ content will have a lasting impact remains to be seen. Bure, who has been outspoken about her conservative beliefs, has drawn the ire of the LGBTQ+ community on more than one occasion.

    In August, actor Jodie Sweetin ― who co-starred with Bure on “Full House” from 1987 to 1995, as well as the Netflix sequel series “Fuller House” from 2016 to 2020 ― said she was “disappointed” to learn that her new film “Craft Me a Romance” would be broadcast on Great American Family.

    “In keeping with my mission of supporting the LGBTQ+ family, any potential or future money made from this sale will be donated to LGBTQ+ organizations,” she told People in a statement.

    After her Wall Street Journal comments drew backlash, Bure issued an Instagram statement in which she accused the media of using her words to “fan flames of conflict and hate.”

    “I am a devoted Christian,” she wrote at the time. “Which means that I believe that every human being bears the image of God. Because of that, I am called to love all people, and I do. If you know me, you know that I am a person who loves fiercely and indiscriminately.”

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  • Google Could Help You Pick A Halloween Costume

    Google Could Help You Pick A Halloween Costume

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    Halloween costumes can be a pain, so a little suggestion can help in a big way…and Google has just the trick

    Halloween is right around the corner and people are thinking about what are they doing for the weekend and what are they doing for Halloween night.  Stay home, stay home and give out candy, go out in a costume, buy a $3 black mask and call it a day.? Decisions and stress.

    Most US adults will not be dressing up based on data from the latest Yahoo/YouGov poll. The  poll unmasked 22% are opting to dress up for the spooky holiday but a whoping 63% have chosen to skip out this season while 14% haven’t decided one way or another.  Depending on what you like to do, one side is wrong.  For those who do like to dress up, Google could help pick a halloween costume.

    Google Trends set up a spooky page called “Frightgeist” showing the most popular costumes and the most popular in each state. There are different sections, including a map of the U.S. highlighting the most searched costumes per state and an option to search for a costume according to your own personal preferences.

    According to the poll a slight smaller percentage will be making their costumes as opposed to buying (hello Amazon!).  A small group are having someone else make their outfit for them, while another are bringing back an existing one from their own closet.

    And another group is still undecided. Here are some of the most popular Halloween costumes for you to consider

    Barbie

    The blockbuster movie lives on in a variety of ways – especially the top choice in this year’s costume. Folks can’t get Kenough of Barbie and why not have recreate the movie with Barbie costumes.

    SpiderMan

    Superheros reign as a top costume and Spiderman wins out.  It could be it is an easy costume.  The gays love it for some reason and truly focus on Spidey being the sexist hero.  Superman and Batman come up behind him.

    RELATED: People Who Use Weed Also Do More Of Another Fun Thing

    Princess

    Princesses were long the king (or queen) of Halloween until they were surpassed by superheroes.  People of all ages still love the costume which ranks in the top 5 of costume every year.  Easy and you can’t go wrong and who doesn’t want to be a princess or prince for the day?

    Witch

    witch costume
    Photo by Zachary Kadolph via Unsplash

    Witch costumes are a classic, easy to  make and are part of the lore of Halloween. Ironically, the first known witch’s outfit is nudity — as in, no clothes at all — which was depicted in paintings. But years later, the look evolved due to political allegiances, Hollywood’s spin on these magical being have gone from Hocus Pocus to Bewitched, so you have a wide range in your selections.

    Dinosaur

    dinosaur
    Photo by Huang Yingone via Unsplash

    In 2015, costume manufacturer Rubie’s Costume Company developed a line of inflatable dinosaur costumes as a merchandise tie-in to Jurassic World. Rubie’s T. rex costume, with a comically large wobbling head, gained popularity in pranks, visual gags, and as an internet meme. Might be a little large for crowded parties, but people will roar at your success.

    Lastly, from Dallas to West Hollywood to Toronto there is the overtly sexy costume. The revealing Halloween costume arrived in a two-wave movement- — first in the 1970s after the sexual revolution and the other took place in the early 2000s, after pivotal films were released which portraying mostly women embracing the sexy Halloween costumes. In West Hollywood, a large portion of the guy’s costumes are underwear which show they are a cop, a superhero, a cowboy, etc.

    Google could help you pick a Halloween costume or you can let you creative, sexy inspiration drive you to something really fun!

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    Anthony Washington

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  • Daniel Minahan’s Long Road to the Epic Gay Love Story of ‘Fellow Travelers’

    Daniel Minahan’s Long Road to the Epic Gay Love Story of ‘Fellow Travelers’

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    Exactly 20 years ago, Daniel Minahan directed his first episode of television for one of the most acclaimed series of its era, Six Feet Under—and on that set, he received an education in the rules of episodic guest-directing. “It had a very rigorous palette, very rigorous lens selection and ideas about blocking and tone,” he says. “You could turn on Six Feet Under at any point and you would recognize it.” It’s a lesson Minahan kept in mind as he stopped by dozens of major series over the next two decades—Deadwood, Grey’s Anatomy, The Good Wife, Game of Thrones, Homeland, and more. And it’s a mantra he’s carried more recently, at last, as the director in charge.

    On Showtime’s Fellow Travelers, the director sets a strict template by helming the snappy first two episodes and executive producing the entire series. “I want you to be able to see the continuity throughout, so it feels like one long piece,” he says. In bringing his own sensibility and discipline, Minahan finds that this epic limited series—which examines a gay love story from the early days of DC McCarthyism to the apex of the AIDS crisis in San Francisco—marks a culmination point for his journeyman career. “It’d be hard to go back to being a director for hire on a show,” he says. “I put a lot of myself into this, and I had a lot to offer.”

    Long a passion project of Oscar nominee Ron Nyswaner (Philadelphia), Fellow Travelers found Minahan also taking on a producer’s duties, working with the creator on matters of casting, location scouting, and, of course, visual storytelling. He’s been doing more of that of late: directing the Deadwood finale movie for HBO, closely collaborating with David Milch; working deeply on the second installment of Ryan Murphy’s American Crime Story; helming the entirety of their next collaboration, Halston, for which Ewan McGregor won an Emmy. Fellow Travelers marks a logical next step, then, for an accomplished director who knows TV inside and out—it’s an old-fashioned historical miniseries, realized with grand scope, but infused with frank depictions of queer sexuality drawn from Minahan’s own life.

    “I came of age as a young gay person in the early ’80s, and moved to New York just at the moment when you’re supposed to be experimenting and falling in love,” he says. “I had firsthand experience of what that was like.”

    Minahan on Fellow Travelers.

    Ian Watson

    Minahan’s first notable credit as a filmmaker actually came as a screenwriter, when he agreed to collaborate with friend Mary Harron on the script for I Shot Andy Warhol, a daring portrait of the feminist artist Valerie Solanas. A critical darling produced by Christine Vachon’s Killer Films and featuring a stellar Lili Taylor in the lead role, the film dropped Minahan into the ’90s American indie boom before production even began. “We had a friend that was remodeling the Chateau Marmont, and [Mary and I] moved in, which was the most unbelievable place—with people like Helmut Newton and Joni Mitchell walking in and out of our lives,” Minahan says. “We became friendly with Dominick Dunne as he was covering the Menendez trial. Christopher Walken lived there. It was just this exciting, vibrant place where people congregated.”

    Minahan’s background to this point was in documentary filmmaking, but the strong reception of Warhol led to Series 7, a dark reality TV satire that marked his feature directorial debut. The producers of Six Feet Under were big fans of the movie, which had attained a kind of cult status, and brought him onto the landmark HBO show’s third season, at the height of its cultural impact. This then led to more robust opportunities in television. Two themes emerged within his work on dramatic series, where he could learn from big name creatives but had relatively little artistic autonomy. The first is that he found himself at the forefront of a major cinematic wave for the medium by contributing to many seminal HBO projects, including Deadwood and True Blood. The second—and there’s some overlap here—concerned Minahan dipping his toe into groundbreaking LGBTQ+ content for a mainstream American audience, itself a significant trend in the burgeoning prestige TV space.

    “Maybe it was as simple as, Hey, get that gay guy, to work on the show—but I’d like to think that I was working with people who were being inclusive and trying to tell a broader story,” Minahan says. Whatever the reason—and it’s worth noting, the creators on these shows included gay men like Six Feet Under’s Alan Ball and Big Love’s Mark V. Olsen and Will Scheffer—he could spend stand-alone hours filming complex and surprising queer relationships, and learn the ropes of not just any kind of sex scene, but queer ones specifically. “In a series like True Blood, the was sex was extreme, and it was meant to shock, and it was transgressive,” he says. By contrast, “The way the gay characters were depicted in Six Feet Under was so fascinating. I hadn’t seen anything like that before then.”

    But even the less racy, less formula-skirting work, like a few network TV gigs, provided an education. Minahan worked on Grey’s Anatomy, for example, in its glory days and absorbed a ton from watching Shonda Rhimes operate. “When you’re a documentary filmmaker, you look at the world in a certain way, and every experience is an opportunity to study human nature,” Minahan says. “This was a completely different kind of storytelling that she was doing, and from what I was doing at HBO.”

    Daniel Minahans Long Road to the Epic Gay Love Story of 'Fellow Travelers'

    Ian Watson

    Minahan developed a reputation as an efficient professional—crucial in TV—and his artistic ambitions never abated. His stamp is all over “The Assassination of Gianni Versace,” the American Crime Story season that moves in stylish narrative reverse, untangling sticky themes of queerness and murder with each episodic backpedal. After years of trying and failing to get a Halston movie made with Vachon, the chance for the limited series arrived with his newfound connection to Murphy and an open option for a book on the New York fashion icon. “It was a big milestone for me,” Minahan says.

    Same goes for Fellow Travelers, which is already attracting strong reviews for everything from Nyswaner’s propulsive scripts to the red-hot lead turns from Matt Bomer and Jonathan Bailey to, yes, Minahan’s exacting and striking filmmaking. He weaves between several timelines, an ambitious gambit that stays clean through his steady stewardship. But coming into this historical drama, he felt aligned with Nyswaner on maintaining a certain emotional immediacy. “I didn’t want there to be a distance between what the characters were feeling and experiencing and the experience of watching it so that it wouldn’t be presentational, that it would have a rawness to it,” Minahan says. “Oftentimes the camera’s handheld, especially in the scenes of intimacy where they’re the most free.” He’d rehearse the more explicit sequences, for instance, exhaustively with his actors and an intimacy coordinator before letting go once calling action: “By the time we got to set, we knew the choreography, and then we could just kind of cut loose. They gave it life.”

    The sex scenes between Bomer’s weathered political staffer and Bailey’s DC newcomer are graphic, extensive, authentic—and narratively essential. The main rule for Minahan was to give each a beginning, middle, and end, treating them like any other dramatic centerpiece. It’s in the bedroom—or, occasionally, slightly more public spaces—where Fellow Travelers’ fascinatingly queer-driven take on power finds its most compelling ideas.

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    David Canfield

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  • Queering the Map Reveals Poignant Glimpses Of Survival In Gaza

    Queering the Map Reveals Poignant Glimpses Of Survival In Gaza

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    As the hellish war between Israel and Hamas unfolds, there are very strong emotions being expressed about who is to blame. But regardless of what your stance is, I hope we can all agree that dehumanizing people is never the answer.

    Unfortunately, some people online are justifying the brutality against Palestinians in Gaza by weaponizing Hamas’ homophobia, using that as a valid reason to wage war on an entire group of people. Homosexuality is a crime in Palestine. In 2022, a gay Palestinian man who went to Israel for asylum was found brutally murdered in the West Bank. Because of Hamas’ cruelty toward gay people, a very uninformed and insensitive opinion is currently floating around: that Israel’s actions against anyone in Hamas-controlled territory are justified. One U.S.-based queer publication went as far as to claim that “if you’re an LGBTQ+ parent, you should worry about Hamas gunning down your kids.”

    Let me be absolutely clear. Homophobia exists in every country at varying degrees. And no entire community deserves the wrath of war because their government outlaws queer expression.

    If you live in a country with a government that has institutionalized homophobia or transphobia — which, let’s face it, is most countries — then you know that this is an inherently tragic justification for mass violence. Governments are seldom an accurate representation of all the people they govern, and bombs don’t selectively choose who they’re going to kill.

    There are innocent queer people trying to survive in Palestine. And their poignant calls for justice have been resounding globally over the past week through Queering the Map — which is likely the one of the only means for expressing themselves in this way.

    Queering the Map is a community-based platform where queer users all over the world map moments they’ve had with other queer people — romantic, platonic and otherwise. Anyone can post to the site, though creator Lucas LaRochelle told The New York Times they and other volunteers review and approve the messages before they are posted to filter out trolls or hateful posts.

    Several accounts coming from Gaza have gone viral in recent days. Though they are unable to be verified, they are completely devastating to read. At the time of this post, the site has been down for about 48 hours and I have reached out to the creator to find out if this is, in any way, related to the posts from Gaza.

    “Idk how long I will live so I just want this to be my memory here before I die,” wrote one user. “My biggest regret is not kissing this one guy. He died two days back.”

    “I’ve always imagined you and me sitting out in the sun, hand in hand, free at last,” wrote another. “We spoke of all the places we would go if we could. Yet you are gone now.”

    As someone whose family comes from countries that are not seen as beacons of LGBTQIA+ progress, I know that there are beautiful queer and trans communities in all of the places that are easily dismissed as monolithically homophobic.

    The queer people in countries that sanction being queer and trans live lives that are often subversive, complex and absolutely worth living. There are also those who don’t function as openly queer people, but hope to be able to some day. LGBTQ+ progress means keeping queer people alive, especially in places where they have even more obstacles to overcome.

    Whenever I read new posts on Queering the Map, it becomes more and more clear that this was a war started by governments, and like all wars, the worst of the suffering is going to be absorbed by everyday people — including queer and trans Palestinians.

    It doesn’t seem like this conflict can have any real winners, and we can’t let our political stance get in the way of seeing the reality of others’ humanity. We can acknowledge the political issues of any country, but whenever we let go of our ability to see people as worthy of life, we are losing on a much deeper level.

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  • This Queer Chemistry Professor’s Teaching Technique Gets 10s Across The Board

    This Queer Chemistry Professor’s Teaching Technique Gets 10s Across The Board

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    If you’ve ever stumbled upon a TikTok video of a chemist in a rainbow-hued lab coat voguing down a school hallway, please know that you’re witnessing the multiple talents of Andre Isaacs (better known as @drdre4000).

    In one of my favorite recent TikToks, he and two of his colleagues do a hand performance, duck walk and dip in lab coats to Azealia Banks’ “I Rule the World.”

    Isaacs, an associate professor at College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts, has been cuntifying all of our timelines — turning the sterile, whitewashed academic halls of his institution into a rainbow runway. The scholar, who came to the States for college after growing up in Jamaica, gets his colleagues and students involved too, and he has become a powerful advocate for the LGBTQ+ community on his campus.

    While queer joy for the masses is always worthy of celebration, Isaacs’ online persona is particularly noteworthy when we consider respectability politics. So many of us are expected to tone down our queerness at work and in other professional settings.

    “For many marginalized people in STEM, it can be a really toxic environment,” Isaacs says, using the abbreviation for science, technology, engineering and math. “And the heteronormative culture is so dominant and alienating for a lot of queer folks.”

    But most of us recognize by now that “professionalism” is a word very closely tied to cishet whiteness, and whenever we express ourselves fully, it can be seen as unseemly or even abrasive to others. For that reason, many of us learn to code-switch in certain academic and corporate settings that don’t allow us to cultivate the most authentic versions of ourselves.

    From his online presence, you can tell Isaacs is ready to disrupt all of that by balancing his scholarly performance and devotion to his students with active, visible queer joy every day.

    “There’s a part of me that always feels nervous posting, even now,” he says, acknowledging his large and supportive fan base. “I do have my own fears of being ostracized. But I always remember that I’m doing this for students who email me from high schools and colleges, and tell me that this is important to them.”

    Hiding parts of our identity can be damaging to our mental health — and probably decreases the quality of our work, too. One of the major reasons so many people get burned out is because they feel unsupported in the workplace. In fact, a recent study found that queer people, especially transgender people, who didn’t feel supported at work struggled with their mental health and were more likely to use drugs to cope.

    This discrepancy is even starker in STEM. One survey published in the journal Science Advances found that LGBTQ professionals in STEM were 27% more likely than their non-LGBTQ counterparts to have experienced minor health issues in the preceding year, and 41% more likely to have experienced insomnia. The study also found that queer people in STEM were more likely to feel socially excluded from their peers and devalued in their expertise.

    “I would love for young students to see STEM as a place where they can bring their unique talents and skills, and not be worried about how their identity will impact how they’re seen or prevent them from getting opportunities to pursue science,” Isaacs says. “And actually, showing up as who you are is critical to the advancement of STEM.”

    Isaacs is right. Scientific advancement is how we’re able to live longer, healthier lives. Twerking along the way makes that life worth living.

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