Connect with us

News

EXCLUSIVE: New UN LGBTI watchdog talks global progress, backlash

Victor Madrigal-Borloz spoke at ILGA-Europe conference

Published

on

Victor Madrigal-Borloz, the U.N.’s LGBTI rights watchdog, speaks at ILGA-Europe’s annual conference in Brussels on Oct. 27, 2018. (Washington Blade photo by Lynare Robbins)

BRUSSELS ā€” The U.N.’s new LGBTI rights watchdog delivered the closing keynote address at ILGA-Europe’s annual conference that took place in Brussels from Oct. 24-27.

ā€œThis movement represents enormous strength, but it is a movement that involves so much pressure and requires self-awareness and the ability to take care of yourself so that you can care and look out for others,ā€ said Victor Madrigal-Borloz in his speech that he gave on Oct. 27.

More than 550 LGBTI activists and allies attended the conference.

The conference’s theme, ā€œpolitics for change, from words into action,ā€ was announced as a forum to promote change by ā€œputting out a loud call to politicians, institutions, partners and allies.ā€

‘Human rights defenders must be vigilant’

Madrigal-Borloz elaborated on his concern for LGBTI activists when he told the Washington Blade during an exclusive interview before his speech that ā€œeverywhere in the world there is enormous progress with legal standards, however, there has been backlash and human rights defenders must be vigilant.ā€ He also discussed the symbiotic relationship between populism and anti-gender backlash when asked about some of the global challenges the LGBTI community currently faces.

ā€œThey feed off of each other because equality can be exploited by populist narratives,ā€ added the independent expert. ā€œWhere populism is flourishing there seems to be a surge of backlash against LGBTI communities.ā€

Madrigal-Borloz discussed what he feels LGBTI communities can do in response to this backlash.

ā€œPeople need to be informed, so itā€™s critical for LGBTI people to get their stories out there since stories allow people to connect,ā€ he said.

Madrigal-Borloz warned the less visible stories are currently those of women who live in the intersections of discrimination.

ā€œIt is important to know the names of Sylvia Rivera and Marsha Johnson,ā€ he said.

In addition to the importance of promoting LGBTI people’s personal stories, the global data on the number of existing LGBTI populations helps secure the understanding they are everywhere. In an effort to heighten visibility and awareness, the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights pursues a working relationship between human rights interests and the private sector through a set of business standards that many Fortune 500 companies promote in collaborations with regional and national LGBTI chambers of commerce.

ā€œVisibility is a priority for LGBTI communities in every region,ā€ Madrigal-Borloz told the Blade.

Madrigal-Borloz: Legal systems don’t ‘resist human rights’

The U.N. Human Rights Council last December named Madrigal-Borloz to succeed Vitit Muntarbhorn, an international law professor from Thailand who resigned because of health reasons.

Madrigal-Borloz, a Costa Rican jurist who was previously the secretary-general of the International Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims, says there is a ā€œsynergy going on with human rights in the world.”

He illustrated the case of Jason Jones, an LGBTI activist who earlier this year successfully challenged the constitutionality of Trinidad and Tobagoā€™s anti-gay Sexual Offenses Act. The case was cited in the India Supreme Court’s Sept. 6 ruling that overturned the country’s sodomy law.

ā€œWe see resistance to changing these laws when it becomes a matter of politics,” said Madrigal-Borloz. “But eventually legal systems will change them because legal analysis does not resist human rights standards.ā€

In terms of balancing legal frameworks for LGBTI rights with the political arena, Madrigal-Borloz said LGBTI people need to be in more elected positions. Currently, 71 countries still criminalize individuals based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

LGBTI activists in India on Sept. 6, 2018, celebrate a ruling that struck down the countryā€™s colonial-era sodomy law. (Photo courtesy of Meera Parida)

With a strong background working to support torture victims globally, Madrigal-Borloz also discussed the practice of so-called conversion therapy.

ā€œI think there is a fair deal of evidence linking conversion therapy with an assumption that there is something deeply pathological about sexual orientation and gender identity,ā€ he said.

He added that complete evidence gathering on the side of the victims to identify the extent of damage created by conversion therapy is needed because it is key to understanding if conversion therapy can be qualified as torture.

ā€œI have the working theory that conversion therapy happens globally with allegations on its practice having been brought to my attention from every region in the world,ā€ said Madrigal-Borloz.

He told the Blade in addition to the harmful narratives that lead to the practice involving conversion therapy, there are anti-gender narratives being promoted in some religious spaces, so dialogues with faith-based communities is a must in the LGBTI human rights movement.

Anti-trans violence rates ‘offend the human conference’

The independent expert says he is ā€œdetermined to support the mandateā€ with which he is charged through U.N. Human Rights Council Resolution 32/2Ā to raise awareness of violence and discrimination against persons on the basis of their sexual orientation or gender identity, and to identify and address the root causes of violence and discrimination. The scope of the work on discrimination and violence is carried out with very careful country alliances.

ā€œThe levels of violence against transgender individuals offend the human conscience,ā€ said Madrigal-Borloz as he stressed LGBTI vulnerabilities are exasperated by humanitarian disasters when documentation is needed to receive humanitarian assistance. ā€œFor transgender individuals, if their documents are not recognized then they are most often kicked out of the lines of humanitarian assistance.ā€

Gender identity and recognition acts remain largely scarce in many regions where transgender populations live with no applicable laws regarding the right to their basic dignity as stigma and prejudice so often creates climates of hostility and violence.

ā€œThere is no way to deny the existence of transgender persons,ā€ said Madrigal-Borloz. ā€œIdentity is the very basic principle of freedom.ā€

Advertisement
FUND LGBTQ JOURNALISM
SIGN UP FOR E-BLAST

Mississippi

ACLU files complaint over Title IX violations in Mississippi school

Allegations include forcing these students to abide by a “biological sex” dress code, enduring repeated and severe harassment and bullying

Published

on

Harrison County School District Mississippi School Board Meeting May 6, 2024. (Photo Credit: Harrison County School District MS/Facebook)

By Erin Reed | GULFPORT, Miss. – The ACLU has filed aĀ Title IX complaintĀ with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights over the consistent, deliberate, and cruel mistreatment of transgender and gender-nonconforming students in the Harrison County, Mississippi School District.

Allegations include forcing these students to abide by a “biological sex” dress code, enduring repeated and severe harassment and bullying, and removing transgender and gender-nonconforming students from school-related functions in violation of Title IX. Previously, the schoolĀ made national newsĀ for forcing a transgender girl, as well as a cisgender gender-nonconforming girl, to miss graduation for wearing a dress and pants, respectively.

The complaint was primarily brought by A.H., a transgender 16-year-old girl who attends Harrison Central High School. After being told by her band teacher that she could wear a black dress to a regional band concert evaluation, she received compliments from her fellow bandmates.

However, when HCHS Principal Kelly Fuller saw her in the hallway, she balked, saying, “You know you can’t wear that right? Boys can’t wear skirts or dresses,” and then added, “you can’t represent our school dressed like that.” She then forced her mother to bring “boys clothes” or threatened to send her to in-school reassignment.

Civil rights complaint detailing A.H. being threatened after wearing a dress.

The incident that appears to have triggered the complaint was not the only time A.H. has suffered harassment and abuse over her gender identity in the school district. Previously, when she entered the girls’ restroom in eighth grade, she was screamed at by a teacher to the point of tears. She was then forced to use the teacherā€™s restroom. In ninth grade, a hall monitor confronted her on her way to the bathroom, demeaned her, and asked, “What are you?”

She also alleges severe bullying and harassment from other students with no resolution from the school. She even received a suspension after being targeted by bullying in the classroom. One student allegedly repeatedly called her a “fa***tā€ and a “tr***y” in the presence of a teacher while class was in session. No action was taken until A.H. stood up for herself and told the student to stop harassing her loudly in the classroom. As a result, A.H. was written up and suspended for two days.

Transgender student suspended after telling a student to stop harassing her.

A.H.’s story is not unique in the district: the district has recently made national news after excluding a transgender girl, as well as a cisgender gender-nonconforming girl, from their own graduation due to their attire. The transgender girl, identified as L.B., was denied entry to her own graduation for wearing a dress and adhering to the girls’ dress code. Another cisgender student, identified as Jai, wore black pants to her graduation in accordance with her usual gender expression and was barred from attending. She was even told that she could remove her pants under her graduation gown, but if her pants were on under her gown, she would not be allowed to walk.

The following summer, the school released a “biological sex” dress code that mandates students “follow the dress attire consistent with their biological sex.” Boys are required to “wear shorts or pants, and shirts and footwear” and are banned from wearing items commonly associated with girls, such as skirts, dresses, and blouses. Girls must “wear dresses or skirts or shorts or pants, and shirts or blouses and footwear.” The policy appears to violate Title IX, as 34 CFR 106.31(b)(4) states that students cannot be subjected to different rules of behavior, sanctions, or treatment based on their sex. Numerous courts have ruled that sex-based dress codes violate Title IX, including the 4th U.S. Court of Appeals, which stated, “Based on the plain language and structure of the statute, we conclude that Title IX unambiguously encompasses sex-based dress codes.”

The ACLU is seeking five remedies for A.H. and students in the Harrison County School District.

  • They seek an order for the district to adopt gender-neutral dress code policies.
  • They demand that the school stop targeting, surveilling, and disciplining students based on sex.
  • The school should adopt policies and procedures for promptly and equitably responding to reports of discrimination.
  • The school should be made to provide mandatory training for District employees about non-discrimination and compliance with federal anti-discrimination lawss
  • The school should issue a written apology to A.H. for discriminatory conduct.

The complaint will be a significant test of how the Biden administration handles a major Title IX complaint concerning gender identity and expression, followingĀ recent updates to Title IX guidance.

Additionally, the complaint emerges in the wake of theĀ death of transgender teenager Nex BenedictĀ in Oklahoma, where similar longstanding allegations of harassment and abuse led to anĀ ongoing formal investigationĀ into the school district.

More thanĀ 20 GOP-led states are suingĀ the Biden administration over new Title IX rules, arguing that they have a right to discriminate against LGBTQ+ students despite Title IX protections. It remains uncertain whether these lawsuits will impact prohibited dress codes, which have been successfully challenged under Title IX even before the new rules.

******************************************************************************************

Erin Reed is a transgender woman (she/her pronouns) and researcher who tracks anti-LGBTQ+ legislation around the world and helps people become better advocates for their queer family, friends, colleagues, and community. Reed also is a social media consultant and public speaker.

******************************************************************************************

The preceding articleĀ was first publishedĀ atĀ Erin In The MorningĀ and is republished with permission.

Continue Reading

California Politics

Influential lesbian political couple killed in San Diego car crash

Moore and Wood were married in a ceremony at Oakland’s Lake Merritt a month prior to same-sex marriage being legalized in California

Published

on

Oakland political leader Peggy Moore, left, and her wife, Hope Wood, were killed Friday night in a vehicle collision in Southern California. (Photo: Moore/Facebook)

By Cynthia Laird, News Editor | SAN DIEGO COUNTY – Oakland political leader Peggy Moore and her wife, Hope Wood, died late Friday night, May 10, following a head-on collision on State Route 76 in unincorporated San Diego County. The news brought a flood of tributes on social media, as friends and colleagues remembered the couple.

According to multiple media reports, Moore and Wood were passengers in a Jeep Gladiator that was traveling westbound on the highway at 11:17 p.m. when a Chrysler 300 that was driving east swerved into the westbound lanes, striking the Jeep.

In addition to Moore and Wood, the driver of the Jeep was killed as was the driver of the Chrysler, theĀ San Diego Union-TribuneĀ reported. A third car, a Toyota Camry, which was behind the Jeep, was involved in a minor side-swipe, according to the reports. It is not known why the Chrysler veered into oncoming traffic.

Moore, 60, had long been involved in Oakland politics. She managed the successful 2014 mayoral campaign for Libby Schaaf and served as a senior adviser to her. In 2016, she unsuccessfully ran for the at-large seat on the Oakland City Council, facing lesbian incumbent Rebecca Kaplan. Moore also worked as an organizer for Barack Obama’s winning 2008 presidential campaign.

In a phone interview with the Bay Area Reporter Monday, Schaaf said that she was devastated by the loss of Moore and Wood. During her 2014 mayoral campaign, Schaaf said that she and Moore “spent all day, every day together for a year.”

“She molded me into the mayor I became ā€” in the most beautiful ways our democracy needs more of,” Schaaf said. “She was centered in love.”

Schaaf said that she hosted a gathering at her home Saturday evening with her former campaign and City Hall staffers. “I was so shocked. I wanted to create a space to celebrate her and Hope,” she said. “It’s a devastating loss for me personally and for democracy.”

Schaaf added that Moore was the only member of her campaign team to come to work for her in City Hall as a senior adviser. Moore stayed until she launched her own City Council campaign, and then Schaaf said that she came back to City Hall for the last few months of Schaaf’s tenure. (Schaaf had been reelected in 2018 and left office in January 2023. She is currently running for state treasurer in 2026.)

Schaaf said that recently, Moore and Wood had been mostly living in Orange County to be closer to Wood’s family. Moore maintained an apartment in Oakland, Schaaf said. Moore had also been spending time with her family in Oklahoma City, which is where she celebrated her 60th birthday.

“I was on a Zoom call with her days ago,” Schaaf said.

Kaplan stated that Moore was a “dedicated community leader.”

“May her memory be a blessing,” she wrote in a text message. “Her death is a shock and a great loss.”

Congressmember Barbara Lee (D-Oakland) knew both women.

“I’m heartbroken to hear of the tragic loss of Peggy Moore and Hope Wood,” Lee wrote on X. “Peggy was a friend, an activist, and one of the best organizers I knew. Her passion and fight for justice and equality is what brought her and Hope together.

“Together they organized, changed hearts and minds, and helped to create a world where who you love doesn’t limit your freedoms,” she added. “Both Peggy and Hope made an impact on our community, on our city, on our state, and on our nation that will be felt for generations to come.”

Started consulting firm

In 2019, Moore and Wood, 48, started Hope Action Change Consulting. On the site, they wrote that they fell in love while working on the 2008 Obama campaign.

“As women of color, we are experts at the dance of values in the workplace,” they wrote on the site. “We have lived outside the main streets of society in the intersections of our gender and our race, and we have learned to navigate a path through many streets where we have not been welcome. Despite the difficulties of this journey, we are full of optimism for where our path leads.”

Moore and Wood were married in a ceremony at Oakland’s Lake Merritt on July 29, 2013. It was a month prior that same-sex marriage returned to being legalized in California after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld an appeals court decision that Proposition 8, the same-sex marriage ban passed by voters in 2008, was unconstitutional.

On Facebook, friends remembered the couple.

“We want you to know how much we loved you both,” Brendalynn Goodall, a member of the Alameda County Democratic County Central Committee, and her wife, Nancy Hinds, wrote. “The news of your passing has left us feeling shocked, numb, and incredibly sad. It’s hard to believe you are no longer here. You were more than just friends ā€” you were family.

“We shared so many unforgettable memories and experiences together ā€” from life’s ups and downs to discussions about politics, community, family, relationships, careers, and even our beloved pets,” added Goodall. “We were always there for each other, through thick and thin.”

Longtime DJ Page Hodel was also stunned by the news. “I am still doubled over … literally speechless over hearing the news of the tragic passing of our beloved Peggy Moore and her wife Hope Wood,” she wrote on Facebook.

Moore is also remembered for co-founding Sistahs Steppin’ in Pride, which took place in Oakland beginning in the early 2000s. Kaplan mentioned it as one of Moore’s accomplishments. For a decade, it brought the East Bay’s diverse queer women’s community together in celebration during the last weekend of August. Up to 2,000 queer women attended the event at its peak, Moore told the B.A.R. in 2011, the last year of the march.

The event had started as the East Bay’s version of the dyke march held in San Francisco and took place in conjunction with the old East Bay Pride. When that event stopped in 2003, Sistahs Steppin’ in Pride stepped up, so to speak, to make sure there was a queer presence in the East Bay.

The new Oakland Pride started in 2010. Last year, a combined Oakland Pride and Pridefest parade and festival were held in early September.

Wood was a former teaching fellow for Harvard Kennedy School’s Leadership Organizing, Action: Leading Change course and a UCLA teacher education program alumna, according to the couple’s consulting website. She had devoted more than two decades of her life to organizing across California and the United States.

Moore and Wood’s friend Lisbet Tellefsen organized an impromptu memorial Sunday, May 12, at the Lake Merritt Amphitheater where Moore and Wood were married. Schaaf said that she attended.

“There were lots of [people wearing] Sistahs Steppin’ in Pride and Moore for City Council T-shirts,” Schaaf said.

“She was an amazing leader for the LGBTQ+ community,” Schaaf added. “She brought her full self to everything she did.”

******************************************************************************************

The preceding article was previously published by the Bay Area Reporter and is republished with permission.

Continue Reading

California Politics

U.S. Rep. Young Kim’s support from far-right extremist Jack Hibbs

Hibbs, a Christian nationalist pastor, podcaster, &Ā commentator has appeared on right-wing outlets like Newsmax, Fox News, & Charlie Kirk

Published

on

Rep. Young Kim (R-CA) has spent years cultivating support from far-right extremist and pastor Jack Hibbs. (Photo montage: Media Matters)

ByĀ Eric Hananoki CHINO HILLS, Calif. – Rep. Young Kim (R-CA) has spent years cultivating support from far-right extremist and pastor Jack Hibbs, who has repeatedly told followers to vote for her and hosted Kim at his California church to call for ā€œher sweet and glorious victory.ā€

Those interactions also include Kim telling him that heā€™s done an ā€œawesome job shepherding, guiding our congregationā€ and praising Hibbs on the day he delivered a sermon attacking LGBTQ pride.Ā 

Hibbs is a Christian nationalist pastor, podcaster, andĀ commentatorĀ who has appeared on right-wing outlets like Newsmax, Fox News, and Charlie Kirkā€™s program. He also has a lengthyĀ recordĀ of toxic commentary, which became aĀ sourceĀ ofĀ controversyĀ earlier this year when House Speaker Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) invited him to serve as the House of Representativesā€™ guest chaplain.

Hibbs has criticized in vitro fertilization (IVF) as a process where people ā€œthrow away 500 childrenā€ to get one child. He said that Jewish people need to abandon their religion. Heā€™s told his congregation that ā€œviolentā€ LGBTQ people will go door-to-door and threaten ā€œto sodomize people who disagree with them.ā€ And heā€™s advised his followers that their Muslim neighbors are going to turn on them ā€œvery soonā€ and side with terrorists.

Hibbs has a long history of bigoted and far-right rhetoric

IVF: Hibbs is staunchly anti-abortion and has also criticized in vitro fertilization. During a 2013 sermon, he said

HIBBS: The Bible says that God opens and closes the womb according to his will. There are people who can’t get pregnant, and they get pregnant through artificial insemination. I would never judge that. And I don’t have an up vote or a down vote on it. I leave that in the hands of God. OK?Ā  [ā€¦]

For me personally, my conviction is it does concern me about the disposing of a fertilized egg. For this, my reasons are purely theological. I understand the scientific part of it. That’s a done deal. It was life before it was fertilized. So the issue becomes to get one child, do we throw away 500 children? See our culture says, who cares? It’s just nothing. I understand that, but you can’t tell that to a scientist. A scientist will tell you that little nothing you just threw in the trash can is just as technically advanced and powerful and meaningful as if it lived to be 99 years old on the scientific level.

You see, it becomes an ethical, moral issue, doesn’t it? So you have to be [INAUDIBLE] in your own heart and your own mind, and just leave it at that. It’s a tough thing to answer. Be personally convinced, and let the Lord lead you in that.

Jewish people: Hibbs stated that people must look past ā€œthe sins of the Jew and give them the hope of Jesusā€ and claimed that ā€œtrue Jewsā€ are those who don’t ā€œget bogged down in Judaism, which … cannot save you.ā€

LGBTQ people: After the Supreme Court approved marriage equality, Hibbs told his congregation in a 2015 sermon: ā€œGod is telling us, ā€˜Jack, church, donā€™t put your hope in man, youā€™ll be disappointed. Hope in me because itā€™s going to be like it was in the days of Lot. Violent homosexuality, knocking on doors, threatening to sodomize people who disagree with them.ā€™ā€ 

In September 2019, Hibbs said of people ā€œwho practice homosexualityā€: ā€œThe Bible says it is destructive against nature. It destroys your body and it ruins your psyche, and it ravages your soul. I have all the Scriptures here to back that up.ā€

He has also stated that ā€œtransgenderism is actually a sexually perverted cultā€ and claimed transgender people are evidence of the ā€œlast days.ā€ He supports dangerous and discredited conversion therapy as he issued guidance telling people how they can supposedly change their sexual orientation.

Muslims: Hibbs has warned his congregation about the alleged danger of Muslims by invoking the ISIS caliphatetelling them during a 2015 sermon: ā€œIf your friends are devout Muslims, they have a horrific day of reckoning coming very soon for them. They are going to have to choose between the caliphate and being a nice neighbor to you. Think of that. They have no choice one way or the other. I’d like to side with Patrick Henry. Give me liberty or give me death.ā€ 

In a 2007 sermon about ā€œThe Rise of Islam,ā€ he falsely said: ā€œNot every Muslim is a terrorist, but every terrorist has been a Muslim.ā€ Speaking on Charlie Kirkā€™s radio show last year, Hibbs said of Islam: ā€œIt is violent, it is deadly, it’s a death cult.ā€ 

Hibbsā€™ church also released aĀ companion guideĀ that unabashedly portrays Muslims as a threat to the country, including stating: ā€œMuslims are mandated to expand where ever they are. They must convert you and or your children. And they must kill those who do not convert.ā€Ā 

An excerpt from anĀ anti-Muslim guideĀ from Jack Hibbs’ church.

Kim has had a years-long history with Hibbs

Kim, a former member of Californiaā€™s State Assembly who currently represents the state’s 40th Congressional District, has spent years relying on the support of Hibbs. 

On February 23, 2020, she appeared with Hibbs at his church, Calvary Chapel Chino Hills, during her second campaign for Californiaā€™s 39th Congressional District. A broadcast posted to the churchā€™s Facebook page identified Kim as a ā€œcongressional candidateā€ (Hibbs is currently under criticism for using his church for electioneering). 

Hibbs began: ā€œOn the local ballot for us here, we’re going to bring out three candidates who we support, we pray for, and we want to honor for their commitment. The first is no stranger to us. She’s not only been here before, but she’ll attend service from time to time. She’s running for the 39th District, which we need her to win this time. I think she won last time, personally. That was up against Gil Cisneros. I’m talking about Young Kim.ā€ 

While on stage, Kim thanked Hibbs for talking about the election, stating: ā€œPastor Jack, you’re doing an awesome job shepherding, guiding our congregation to really understand why it is so important to find out who the candidates are with biblical values so we don’t have the legislation, the sex education that is passing while we were sleeping.ā€ 

She then told the congregation that ā€œwe need to elect elected leaders who share our Christian biblical values.ā€ 

After Kim spoke, Hibbs said: ā€œWe love her. We thank you for her, and God, we pray that come election night that there would be no angel or demon able to tamper with the results. That Lord, you would bring her sweet and glorious victory.ā€ 

Kim has repeatedly praised Hibbs online. After that February 2020 endorsement, she shared photos of her appearance with Hibbs and wrote: ā€œHad a blessed Sunday visiting Calvary Chapel Chino Hills and Agape Church OC in Yorba Linda. Thank you for giving me an opportunity to share my testimony. I am so grateful and encouraged by your prayers!ā€ 

She also wrote in August 2018: ā€œGreat to meet with Pastor Jack Hibbs ā€¦ Thank you for your prayers, your encouragement, and all you do for our community!ā€ 

And onĀ June 5, 2022, she praised Hibbs for delivering a sermon, stating: ā€œGreat to hear Pastor Jackā€™s sermon and see friends this morning at Calvary Chapel Chino Hills. Thanks for the warm reception!ā€Ā 

While Kim did not specify the content of the sermon, or what she heard, that June 5 sermon had criticism of Pride Month, with Hibbs stating

HIBBS: Some people are saying that it’s Pride Month. And so I had a thought about that. Look, it’s a free country. Our Constitution protects everyone’s views and stuff like that. You know? It’s a free country. That’s their, that’s ā€” they said it’s their month.

And then I thought, you know what? We ought to start ā€” by the way, I’m joking. But could you imagine? Let’s start a Christian pride month. Now, what what no. Don’t clap. Don’t clap. That’s not good.

Where do you go to church? You should not clap at that. Christian and pride should never come together. Right? That’s important. Of all the sins listed in the Scriptures, the sin of pride is the original, the Bible says.

In addition to endorsing Kim at his church, Hibbs has frequently praised her online:

  • HeĀ wroteĀ in August 2018: ā€œVOTE PRO-LIFE. I had a great sit down with YOUNG KIM. We discussed issues our biblical worldview and prayed together.ā€Ā 
  • HeĀ wroteĀ in February 2020 that he ā€œjust voted for Young Kimā€ and posted a picture of a Kim campaign sign. HeĀ statedĀ a few days later: ā€œIf you attend Calvary Chapel Chino Hills then you most likely live (as I do) in the 39th. District and If you do then I am asking you to support and vote for Young Kim. SHE HAS 100% OF MY SUPPORT – – VOTE YOUNG KIM in the 39th.ā€Ā 
  • HeĀ wroteĀ in April 2020 regarding a coronavirus op-ed she penned for right-wing outletĀ The Epoch Times: ā€œA BIG THANK YOU from our very own Young Kim. And if you her Op-Ed, remember to vote for her this coming November (if we have elections).ā€Ā 
  • HeĀ wroteĀ in January 2021 regarding Kimā€™s support for anti-abortion legislation: ā€œWe are so proud of our very own congresswoman Young Kim. God bless you Young keep up the fight weā€™ve got your back.ā€Ā 

Additionally, Hibbs invited his followers to a 2018 ā€œMeet and Greet with Young Kim, Candidate for the 39th Congressional District,ā€ adding, ā€œI want to encourage you to pray and vote Young Kim on Tuesday.ā€ He also donated to Kimā€™s campaign in 2020. 

In a post in February, Hibbs againĀ endorsedĀ Kim for Congress.

************************************************************************************

The preceding article & research studyĀ was previously publishedĀ by Media Matters for America and is republished with permission.

Continue Reading

Federal Government

U.S. Justice Dept. takes major step toward reclassifying marijuana

“Far too many lives have been upended because of a failed approach to marijuana and Iā€™m committed to righting those wrongs”

Published

on

President Joe Biden discusses his administration's move toward reforming drug policy on cannabis (Screen capture: X)

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Justice on Thursday took a major step toward loosening the federal government’s regulation of marijuana by issuing a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to the Drug Enforcement Administration, which outlines a proposal to reclassify it under the federal Controlled Substances Act.

The move comes pursuant to the Biden-Harris administration’s April 30 announcement of plans to recategorize cannabis as a Schedule III substance, which could substantially lessen the criminal penalties for those convicted of using, possessing, selling, distributing, or cultivating the drug.

A 60-day public comment period will begin after the NPRM is published on the Federal Register, along with a concurrent review of the proposed regulatory reforms by an administrative law judge assigned by the DEA.

Since the CSA was passed in 1971, cannabis has been listed under Schedule I, the category reserved for drugs that are considered to be the most dangerous and lacking any currently accepted medical use in the U.S.

In a press release, a senior administration official noted that “marijuana is currently classified higher than fentanyl and meth ā€“ the drugs driving our Nationā€™s overdose epidemic.”

President Joe Biden posted a video on X in which he said the proposal to house cannabis under the Schedule III regulatory regime constitutes “an important move towards reversing longstanding inequities.”

“Todayā€™s announcement builds on the work weā€™ve already done to pardon a record number of federal offenses for simple possession of marijuana,” the president said. “It adds to the action weā€™ve taken to lift barriers to housing, employment, small business loans, and more for tens of thousands of Americans.”

“Look folks no one should be in jail for merely using or possessing marijuana,” Biden said. “Period.”

The president added, “Far too many lives have been upended because of a failed approach to marijuana and Iā€™m committed to righting those wrongs. You have my word on it.”

Continue Reading

Los Angeles County

New on the LA County Channel

You can watch on Channel 92 or 94 on most cable systems, or anytime here. Catch up on LA County Close-Up here

Published

on

Photo Credit: County of Los Angeles


New on the County Channel

Culture Club South Bay Culture Club, a non-profit organization located at the historic Bruce’s Beach, honors the legacy of Willa and Charles Bruce, who established a beach resort in Manhattan Beach in the 1900s. In collaboration with LA County, Culture Club promotes diversity and inclusion among children through activities like surfing, volleyball, education, and culinary experiences. This program creates lasting memories while paying tribute to an important piece of local history.

You can watch more stories like this on Channel 92 or 94 on most cable systems, or anytimeĀ here. Catch up on LA County Close-UpĀ here.

In Case You Missed It

Commercial Acquisition Fund Grants Available For Nonprofits

The Los Angeles County Department of Economic Opportunity recently launched the Commercial Acquisition Fund to provide grants to qualifying nonprofit organizations to support the acquisition of vacant or abandoned land and buildings in designated communities that were most negatively impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Commercial Acquisition Fundis funded by the County, with $10 million in American Rescue Plan Act funds and will be awarded as recoverable grants, ranging from $500,000 to $2,000,000. Acquisitions and funding must occur before December 1, 2024.

The deadline to apply is May 20th at 5:00 p.m.Ā To learn more, apply, or sign-up to attend a community webinar, visitĀ lacaf.info.

At Your Service

LA County Rent Relief Program is Reopening!

Following a successful initial launch, the Los Angeles County Rent Relief Program is set to open for a second round of applications. Landlords affected by the COVID-19 pandemic can apply to receive up to $30,000 per rental unit to cover past-due rent and other eligible expenses incurred since April 1, 2022.

The application window will openĀ Monday, May 20, 2024, at 9 a.m.Ā and will close on Tuesday, June 4, 2024, at 4:59 p.m.Ā To learn more about the eligibility criteria, and to receive a direct link to the application when it goes live, visit the LA County Rent Relief Program website atĀ lacountyrentrelief.com.

Out and About

Marina Culture Jam on May 26th

Celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander Month at the Marina Culture Jam event on Sunday, May 26! Presented by the Department of Beaches and Harbors and The Music Center, Marina Culture Jam is a FREE special 3-part series featuring live performances and more!

Click hereĀ to learn more and RSVP for this free event.

Photo Finish

LA County’s Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center’sĀ Animal Assisted Therapy Program. (Photo: Los Angeles County/Mayra Beltran Vasquez)

Click hereĀ to access more photos of LA County in action.

Continue Reading

South America

Peru classifies transgender people as mentally ill

President Dina Boluarte signed decree on May 10

Published

on

Government Palace in Lima, Peru (Photo courtesy of the Peruvian government)

LIMA, Peru ā€” The Peruvian government on May 10 published a decree that classifies transgender people as mentally ill.

Human Rights Watch on Wednesday noted the country’s Essential Health Insurance Plan that President Dina Boluarte, Health Minister CĆ©sar VĆ”squez and Economic and Finance Minister JosĆ© Arista signed references “ego-dystonic sexual orientation.” The decree also notes, among other things, “transsexualism” and “gender identity disorder in childhood.

Human Rights Watch in its press releaseĀ notesĀ the Health Ministry subsequently said it does not view LGBTQ identities as “illnesses.” Peruvian LGBTQ+ advocacy groups, however, have sharply criticized the decree.

“This decision is an alarming setback in our fight for the human rights of trans people in Peru, and it represents a serious danger to our health and well-being,” said Miluska LuzquiƱos, a trans activist who works with the Latin American and Caribbean Network of Trans People, which is known by the Spanish acronym REDLACTRANS, on her Facebook page.

A lack of legal recognition and protections has left trans Peruvians vulnerable to discrimination and violence.

Luisa Revilla in 2014 became the first trans person elected in Peru when she won a seat on the local council in La Esperanza, a city in the northwestern part of the country. 

She left office in 2019. Revilla died from COVID-19 in 2021.

Continue Reading

Southern California

Triple A: Gas prices drop for four straight weeks

The average price for self-serve regular gasoline in California is $5.24, which is eight cents lower than a week ago

Published

on

Triple A Auto Club/Los Angeles Blade

LOS ANGELES – Local gas prices have dropped for four straight weeks, but California continues to be the only state with an average price above $5 a gallon, according to the Auto Clubā€™s Weekend Gas Watch. The average price for self-serve regular gasoline in California is $5.24, which is eight cents lower than a week ago. The average national price is $3.60, which is four cents lower than a week ago.

The average price of self-serve regular gasoline in the Los Angeles-Long Beach area is $5.21 per gallon, which is eight cents less than last week, 18 cents less than last month, and 37 cents higher than last year. In San Diego, the average price is $5.23, which is six cents lower than last week, 14 cents lower than last month, and 41 cents higher than this time last year.

On the Central Coast, the average price is $5.22, which is five cents lower than last week, 14 cents lower than last month, and 38 cents higher than last year. In Riverside, the average per-gallon price is $5.12, which is eight cents lower than last week, 19 cents lower than last month and 36 cents higher than a year ago. In Bakersfield, the $5.23 average price is three cents less than last week, eight cents less than last month, and 40 cents higher than a year ago today.

ā€œCalifornia continues to have the highest average gas prices in the U.S., and despite a month of price declines, the state average price is still more than 40 cents higher than Hawaii, which is the second most expensive state for fuel,ā€ said Auto Club Spokesperson Doug Shupe.

The Weekend Gas Watch monitors the average price of gasoline. As of 9 a.m. on May 16, averages are:

051624 Final

Continue Reading

Africa

Kenyan advocacy group offers safety tips to LGBTQ+ hookup app users

Blackmail, kidnappings and assaults are commonplace

Published

on

(Bigstock photo)

MOMBASA, Kenya ā€” The growing cases of queer people in Africa becoming victims of blackmail, physical and sexual assault from online hook-ups have compelled a Kenyan LGBTQ+ rights group to work with the community to help it stay safe when using digital platforms.

Upinde Advocates for Inclusion held a 3-day training from May 11-14 to teach queer people about unsafe social media and dating app hook-up practices that suspected homophobes exploit.

The Mombasa-based group of which Lizzie Ngina is executive coordinator noted lesbian, bisexual and queer women, and gender non-conforming people are the most frequent targets online and on Grindr and other dating apps.

 ā€œLBQ women and GNC persons confront major challenges in terms of digital security and data protection, freedom of expression, assembly, association, speech, privacy, protest and online organizing,ā€ Upinde Advocates for Inclusion stated.

Although the digital platforms were seen as convenient meet-up places for LGBTQ+ people in overcoming physical anti-gay attacks, Upinde Advocates for Inclusion said anti-gay discrimination, marginalization, gender-based violence, misinformation, and disinformation limits LGBTQ+ and gender non-conforming people from accessing the social media services. Ā Ā Ā 

Queer people while using dating apps and social media for hookups were, however, urged to first trust their intuition before deciding to have a physical meeting with people with whom they chat online.

ā€œIf it does not seem like someone you are messaging is using their true identity, they probably are not. In this case, do not agree to meet them in person,ā€ Upinde Advocates for Inclusion warned. 

It asked LGBTQ+ users to ensure the first in-person meeting with someone they met online is in a public place that is queer-friendly and known to them. Upinde Advocates for Inclusion also advised queer people to inform their trusted friends or family about their meeting plans, the place, and how long they expect it will take place in order to ensure someone can intervene if something goes wrong.

ā€œOrganize your own means of transport to and from the meeting, and do not accept a free ride from a stranger,” the group warned. “Also, do not move to a secondary location if you feel unsure during the meeting.ā€ 

Upinde Advocates for Inclusion also warned queer app users to remain sober during the meeting and cautioned against leaving their food or drinks unattended in order to avoid any potential risks associated with spiking.

The National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, Ishtar-MSM and other Kenyan LGBTQ+ advocacy groups that offer legal aid to queer people last year reported about 100 cases of blackmail, extortion, physical and sexual assault against their members by suspected homophobes they met on dating apps and social media.

The two organizations this month noted 10 of the cases are expected before courts soon, although they said most victims of anti-gay attacks don’t report them to the authorities because they fear further stigmatization and discrimination. Consensual same-sex sexual relations also remain criminalized in Kenya. 

Targeting the LGBTQ+ community on digital platforms and dating apps is not unique to Kenya.

The Washington Blade last month reported it is still risky for queer Nigerians to search for a partner or to use gay dating apps infiltrated by homophobes who lure them to meet in-person and then rob or assault them. South African authorities last year arrested four men in connection with the targeting of Grindr users.

LGBTQ+ Kenyans urged to protect themselves at protests

Upinde Advocates for Inclusion in their workshop taught participants about the signs that suspected homophobes or their associates have compromised their devices. They include unusual activities on their cell phones that include calls with untraced history, disappearing blank messages, blinking screens, high data consumption, devices that overheat when not in use and echo when picking calls and quick battery depletion with minimal use.

ā€œIf you suspect your device is compromised, do not format or reset it, log out all the accounts, find an alternative device to use, change the password for the accounts on the device, and do not connect the gadget to any other devices,ā€ Upinde Advocates for Inclusion warned. 

The group also taught queer people about how they should conduct themselves when taking part in street protests amid anti-gay attacks. Upinde Advocates for Inclusion advised them to always to identify safe alternative routes to and from the protests, wear comfortable running shoes, and always carry a spare outfit that is not LGBTQ+-specific.

ā€œIf you are in a group, always strategize on having a meeting point should there be any danger or should you get separated,” the group stated. “Also, try to split up responsibilities among the group so that one person canā€™t be targeted.ā€

Upinde Advocates for Inclusion also urged queer people to always leave a protest before it ends, to have an emergency contact on speed dial or memorize it for immediate help in case of danger and to always to keep in touch with a trusted contact who is familiar with the protest but not attending it. 

Continue Reading

U.S. Federal Courts

Federal court: Maryland parents cannot opt out of LGBTQ lessons

The lawsuit challenges Montgomery County Public Schoolsā€™ policy that ā€œmandates the inclusion of literature with LGBTQ+ characters”

Published

on

Lewis F. Powell Jr. Courthouse, United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, Richmond, Virginia. (Photo Credit: U.S. Courts/GSA)

RICHMOND, Va. – A federal appeals court on Wednesday ruled a group of Montgomery County parents cannot ā€œopt outā€ their children from classes in which lessons or books on LGBTQ-related topics are taught.

The parents filed their lawsuit in May 2023.

An American Civil Liberties Union press release notes the lawsuit challenges Montgomery County Public Schoolsā€™ policy that ā€œmandates the inclusion of literature with LGBTQ+ characters as part of the ELA (English and Language Arts) curriculum, aiming to promote understanding and acceptance among students.ā€ 

ā€œAlthough the district originally allowed parents to opt their children out of some ELA lessons, it rescinded the opt-out policy because the number of requests grew too difficult to manage, student absenteeism soared, and it created a stigmatizing environment for students who are LGBTQ or have LGBTQ family members, undermining the purpose of the inclusivity requirement,ā€ said the ACLU.

U.S. District Judge Deborah L. Boardman of the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland ruled against the parents. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Va., upheld the decision.

ā€œWeā€™re talking about books like ā€˜Pride Puppy,ā€™ which is light-hearted and affirming,ā€ saidĀ ACLU of Maryland Legal Director Deborah Jeon in a press release. ā€œDuring a time of intensifying calls to ban books and limit access to information about LGBTQ+ people and identities, this ruling in support of inclusion in education matters.ā€

Continue Reading

Louisiana

Bills targeting Louisiana’s LGBTQ+ youth close to final approval

Hortonā€™s bill could potentially hinder student chapters of the Gay-Straight Alliance and other LGBTQ+ student organizations

Published

on

House Bill 122Ā by Rep. Dodie Horton, R-Haugton, (speaking) which limits discussion of gender and sexuality in public K-12 schools, was also approved.Ā 

ByĀ Piper HutchinsonĀ | BATON ROUGUE, La. – Two anti-LGBTQ+ bills advanced Wednesday from the Louisiana Senate Committee on Education, putting them one step away from final legislative approval.Ā 

The committee advanced House Bill 121 by Rep. Raymond Crews, R-Bossier City, which prohibits the use of transgender and nonbinary youthā€™s chosen names and pronouns in public K-12 schools without parental permission. 

House Bill 122 by Rep. Dodie Horton, R-Haugton, which limits discussion of gender and sexuality in public K-12 schools, was also approved. 

Both bills were advanced without objection. Sen. Katrina Jackson-Andrews, D-Monroe, was the only Democrat present. 

The Legislature approved both bills last year. Then-Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, vetoed them, and Republicans were unable to overturn his action. Lance Maxwell, a legislative liaison for Republican Gov. Jeff Landry, attended the committee meeting in support of Crewsā€™ and Hortonā€™s bills. 

Wednesdayā€™s emotional hearing marked the latest step for an advancing culture-war agenda, once held back under a Democratic governor. With the support of an ultra-conservative in the governorā€™s mansion, a slew of anti-LGBTQ+ proposals are rapidly advancing toward enactment. 

ā€œI donā€™t know how yā€™all continue to hear things from us about our pain and our trauma, and just still pass bills,ā€ Peyton Rose Michelle, executive director of Louisiana Trans Advocates, said. ā€œI donā€™t know how yā€™all sit through these things, and you donā€™t break down.ā€ 

Crewsā€™ bill would require teachers and other school personnel to use a studentā€™s given name and pronouns that align with their birth sex unless a student has permission from their parents to use their chosen name. The proposal has been promoted as a ā€œparental rightsā€ bill. 

ā€œThis bill is a grave violation of parental rights by prioritizing the moral objections of others over the fundamental rights of transgender students to be recognized by their chosen names, pronouns and identities,ā€ SarahJane Guidry, executive director of LGBTQ+ rights group Forum For Equality said. ā€œThis legislation sets a dangerous and discriminatory precedent.ā€ 

ā€œThis relentless focus on legislating the lives of a small, vulnerable population diverts precious time, money and energy away from addressing real educational issues,ā€ Guidry added. 

Under Crewsā€™ bill, teachers would be allowed to disregard a parentā€™s choice to respect their transgender or nonbinary childā€™s name and pronouns if they have religious opposition to doing so.

In an interview, Crews said that while his bill supports parental rights, parents should not be able to eclipse somebody elseā€™s religious rights. 

His bill does not have an exception for those who have a religious opposition to deadnaming or misgendering students. Deadnaming is when someone uses a transgender or nonbinary personā€™s birth name or ā€œdead nameā€ against their wishes. Misgendering occurs when someone refers to an individual as a gender that they do not identify. 

While the bill would allow parents to request a classroom change if a teacher disregards their permission for their transgender or nonbinary child to use their name or pronouns, it does not require this change to take place. Advocates have argued such classroom changes may not be feasible in smaller schools. 

Jacob Newsom, an Ascension Parish public school teacher, said disregarding studentsā€™ names and pronouns would make them uncomfortable, which he believes would hamper the learning environment.

ā€œHow am I going to reach this child? How am I going to effectively teach this child?ā€ Newsom said. 

ā€œThere is an undeniable correlation between feeling safe and secure and being able to learn,ā€ Megan Sheehan-Dean, a child learning expert, later added. 

At the core of Crewsā€™ proposal is his belief that parents have the right to know whether their children are transgender. Advocates for the LGBTQ+ community say the bill would force transgender youth to out themselves to their parents or else be deadnamed and misgendered at school. They have raised concerns about what happens when parents find out ā€” and donā€™t approve.

A survey from the Trevor Project found 38% of transgender women, 39% of transgender men and 35% of nonbinary youth have experienced homelessness as a result of parental rejection. 

Hortonā€™s bill is similar to a Florida law referred to by critics as a ā€œDonā€™t Say Gayā€ bill. Her proposal is much broader and would apply to K-12 grades, whereas Floridaā€™s law applies only to early grade students. 

Florida recently settled a lawsuit over the law filed by civil rights activists. As part of the agreement, students and teachers are permitted to discuss gender and sexuality as long as it is not part of classroom instruction. 

Horton said she didnā€™t believe teachers should discuss their ā€œlifestyle choicesā€ with students. 

ā€œHaving sexualized personal discussions between educators and students in our classrooms are not appropriate, and they can rob our children of their innocence while imposing suggested influence over their developing young minds,ā€ Horton said. 

Hortonā€™s bill would not just apply to classroom instruction. It also prohibits ā€œcovering the topics of sexual orientation or gender identityā€ during any extracurricular and athletics events, meaning it could potentially hinder student chapters of the Gay-Straight Alliance and other LGBTQ+ student organizations. 

When asked by committee Chair Sen. Rick Edmonds, R-Central, Horton agreed that heterosexuality falls under ā€œsexual orientationā€ and is also not appropriate for classroom discussion. 

The bills will next be discussed in the Senate.

******************************************************************************************

Piper Hutchinson is a reporter for the Louisiana Illuminator. She has covered the Legislature and state government extensively for the LSU Manship News Service and The Reveille, where she was named editor in chief for summer 2022.

******************************************************************************************

The preceding pieceĀ was previously publishedĀ by the Louisiana Illuminator and is republished by permission.

Louisiana IlluminatorĀ is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence.

Follow Louisiana Illuminator onĀ FacebookĀ andĀ Twitter.

Continue Reading

Popular