transdada

poetics, time, body disruption and marginally queer solutions

Saturday, May 13, 2006

Supreme Court to Hear Argument on Sex Change

The Supreme Court is to hear the first case on the legality of changing entries in the Family Register for those who have had sex-change operations. The court is asking medical experts with experience in gender reassignment surgery and religious figures opposing the procedure to testify on May 18.

The case is an appeal by transgender individuals against rulings denying their request to change their sex in the Family Register at first and second instance. Next week’s hearing is to prepare the legal ground for a Supreme Court ruling in the case.

"The request of transgender individuals to change their official register will be decided after considering whether it is compatible with the feelings and understanding of the people and after opinions from various experts are collected," a court official said.


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Catholic student magazine removes gay poem


HOUSTON, May 12 (UPI) -- Student staffers at a Texas Catholic college literary magazine have ripped out an erotic gay poem, said to have been inserted by the rejected author.
Copies of the University of St. Thomas' Laurels magazine were made available without the poem "Lusting Chaos," by Jonathan Rea, 21, a gay junior English and communications student, the Houston Chronicle reported.
The poem, addressed to a male lover, does not describe any sexual acts, yet after the magazine's poetry committee voted 3-2 in favor of publishing the poem, English professor Janet Lowery, the magazine's faculty adviser, cast the final, overriding vote against it.

Friday, May 12, 2006

Governor Questions Gay Man's Military Dismissal
Matt Dwyer Was Discharged From Air National Guard

(AP) SPRINGFIELD, Ill. The Air National Guard's discharge of a gay serviceman has drawn the attention of Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich.

Blagojevich said today he thinks the discharge should be investigated. The Democratic governor says he has asked the attorney general to review the matter.


Springfield resident Marty Dwyer was discharged from the Air National Guard in February after his superiors learned he was gay. He was a staff sergeant who had served in the Guard for 13 years.



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POPE SPARKS NEW 'GAY MARRIAGE' ROW


(ANSA) - Rome, May 11 - Pope Benedict XVI provoked a political row in Italy on Thursday by reaffirming the Catholic Church's firm opposition to any form of 'gay marriage' .

Speaking to participants at an international congress in the Vatican on the family, the pope said marriage between men and women had a deep significance connected to procreation and the continuation of society .

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

US states introduce transgender protections


Two US states have made historic strides in protecting the rights of transgender and gender nonconforming people.

Hawaii and Vermont, have in the past week introduced laws to include, protect and support transgender people.

Hawaii’s second transgender-inclusive bill passed into law, followed by an expansive non-discrimination bill in Vermont clearing the Legislature, positioning Vermont to become the ninth state in America to make discriminatory practices based on gender identity or expression illegal. 

The District of Columbia also amended its anti-discrimination law in March to include gender identity or expression.

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D.C. minister calls gay men ‘faggots’ in sermon
Activists, mayoral candidates outraged


Two African-American gay groups are calling on D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams to oust from his Interfaith Council a city minister who used the term "faggot" and "sissy" to describe gay men in an April 9 sermon.

"It takes a real man to confess Jesus as Lord and savior," Bishop Alfred A. Owens Jr., pastor of Greater Mount Calvary Church in Northeast D.C., told his congregation in his Good Friday sermon.
"I'm not talking about no faggot or no sissy," he said. "Wait a minute! Let the real men come on down here and take a bow … all the real men. I'm talking about the straight men."


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Empowerment of transvestites on Koovagam fest
By Papri Sri Raman,

Villupuram (Tamil Nadu): India's transvestites, who have faced ostracism for centuries, are discovering their identities and potentials and getting to know their rights and social duties in a tiny village festival here in Tamil Nadu.

Since time immemorial, the Aravanis or eunuch-transvestites have been gathering at the ancient temple of the deity Koothandavar in Koovagam village, about 200 km south of Chennai, to perform an annual ritual of wedding and widowhood.

This year the festival or the day of the transvestites fell Tuesday night. They celebrate their special day by meeting friends and family, participating in fashion shows, debates and theatre, telling their life stories, exhibiting their skills and, of course, giving non-profit organisations like the Tamil Nadu AIDS Initiative (TAI) a platform to spread awareness about sexually transmitted diseases and the HIV.



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George Takei, Mr. Sulu of Star Trek, Comes Out and Speaks Out


I’m Matt Rothschild, and welcome to Progressive Radio. My guest today is Star Trek’s Mr. Sulu, who came out last year to work with the Human Rights Campaign to combat the rightwing’s push against gay marriage.

George Takei: It’s a pleasure to be with you and to discuss this issue with you. But let me put what you said about me coming out last year in context. I’ve been together with my partner Brad Altman for two decades now. We’ve been out with our family and friends and with various activities we’re involved with in the civic community. We support nonprofits. Our names have been engraved together in granite on donors’ walls. So we’ve been out, in that sense. But what I’d not done is talk to the press, you guys, because you’re a whole different ball game.

But last year our California legislature did an extraordinary thing, a historic thing, a landmark event: They passed the same-sex marriage bill, something that the Massachusetts legislature had not even done. It was a judicial process that brought about the legalization of same-sex marriage in Massachusetts. We were elated. All that was required for that bill to become the law of the state was the autograph of another actor, who also happens to be the governor of the state of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Gay Iraqi boy shot dead


Iraq is such a lovely place, isn't it? This horrific story is from Britain's Independent: Human rights groups have condemned the "barbaric" murder of a 14-year-old boy, who, according to witnesses, was shot on his doorstep by Iraqi police for the apparent crime of being gay.

Ahmed Khalil was shot at point-blank range after being accosted by men in police uniforms, according to his neighbours in the al-Dura area of Baghdad.

Campaign groups have warned of a surge in homophobic killings by state security services and religious militias following an anti-gay and anti-lesbian fatwa issued by Iraq's most prominent Shia leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani...


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Gay marriage opponents submit petitions


SPRINGFIELD -- Kicking off a symbolic campaign against gay marriage, conservative groups filed petitions Monday calling for a statewide vote to change the Illinois constitution to define marriage as a relationship between "one man and one woman."

Gov. Rod Blagojevich took a different political stand on the rights of same-sex couples Monday by extending benefits to the domestic partners of most state employees.



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Russia: End Anti-Gay Violence, Permit Gay Pride Parade


(New York, May 8, 2006) Moscow authorities must investigate two incidents where protestors threatened and attacked people entering and leaving gay-friendly bars, Human Rights Watch said today in a letter to Mayor Yuri Luzhkov. These assaults on freedoms of association and assembly underscore the need for Mayor Luzhkov to end a threatened ban on Russia's first planned gay pride parade, scheduled for May 27.

"As Moscow's gays and lesbians prepare for their first gay pride parade, Mayor Luzhkov faces a choice," said Scott Long, director of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights Program at Human Rights Watch. "He can stand up to protect human rights, or endorse the views of extremists responsible for anti-gay violence."

Gay Iraqi boy shot dead


Iraq is such a lovely place, isn't it? This horrific story is from Britain's Independent: Human rights groups have condemned the "barbaric" murder of a 14-year-old boy, who, according to witnesses, was shot on his doorstep by Iraqi police for the apparent crime of being gay.

Ahmed Khalil was shot at point-blank range after being accosted by men in police uniforms, according to his neighbours in the al-Dura area of Baghdad.

Campaign groups have warned of a surge in homophobic killings by state security services and religious militias following an anti-gay and anti-lesbian fatwa issued by Iraq's most prominent Shia leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani...


***


Gay marriage opponents submit petitions


SPRINGFIELD -- Kicking off a symbolic campaign against gay marriage, conservative groups filed petitions Monday calling for a statewide vote to change the Illinois constitution to define marriage as a relationship between "one man and one woman."

Gov. Rod Blagojevich took a different political stand on the rights of same-sex couples Monday by extending benefits to the domestic partners of most state employees.



***

Russia: End Anti-Gay Violence, Permit Gay Pride Parade


(New York, May 8, 2006) Moscow authorities must investigate two incidents where protestors threatened and attacked people entering and leaving gay-friendly bars, Human Rights Watch said today in a letter to Mayor Yuri Luzhkov. These assaults on freedoms of association and assembly underscore the need for Mayor Luzhkov to end a threatened ban on Russia's first planned gay pride parade, scheduled for May 27.

"As Moscow's gays and lesbians prepare for their first gay pride parade, Mayor Luzhkov faces a choice," said Scott Long, director of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights Program at Human Rights Watch. "He can stand up to protect human rights, or endorse the views of extremists responsible for anti-gay violence."

Monday, May 08, 2006

Prejudice forms a new line between east and west

As gay people get greater rights in parts of EU, other countries entrench bigotry


Tourists and young couples ambling through the historic centre of Krakow on a warm spring afternoon were stopped in their tracks by a sight reminiscent of the era of martial law. As drinks flowed in the open-air cafes of Poland's ancient royal capital, a phalanx of armed police in full riot gear inched its way slowly through the medieval city.

But unlike the 1980s when authorities crushed dissent, today's black-clad police officers were protecting the right to free speech of hundreds of gay and lesbian marchers holding their annual parade in Krakow. The precautions were wise: within 30 minutes stone-throwing far-right skinheads stormed the protesters from a side street.

Area gay parents voice concerns about rights


Like any other parent, Karen Bellavance-Grace cherishes the moments big and small: a walk with her sons, a visit with grandparents, a review of a stellar report card.

But as a gay mother who adopted her children through the state Department of Social Services, the Northampton resident also watches with dismay as Gov. W. Mitt Romney maneuvers to allow the Roman Catholic Church to wiggle around anti-discrimination laws that protect gay adoptions.

Romney filed legislation this month to allow Catholic adoption agencies in Springfield, Worcester and Fall River to refuse to consider gays on religious grounds. The move followed a decision by Catholic Charities of Boston to halt its adoption services after learning that it had to accept gay applicants to comply with state law.


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Sam I am no more


It's late April, there's a chill in the air, and amid the faceless sprawl of Auckland's North Shore, a carefully planned killing is being carried out.

The soon-to-be-deceased is 48-year-old motoring magazine publisher Sam Parker. He lives in Forrest Hill and drives a huge, black four-wheel drive that screams "don't mess with me", complete with the number plate "4DRNLN". This is for his company, Adrenalin Publishing. Think 4WD magazine, Diesel Industry News and other such testosterone-fuelled titles.
Sam will take a couple of weeks to pass on. There will be no grave, but if there was an epitaph, perhaps it would say, "here lies Sam Parker, a nice guy, but not who he wanted to be".

Sam is being killed off, so to speak, by his alter ego, Cathy. Cathy is the woman trapped inside Sam's body. Cathy - the name of the first girl Sam had a crush on at school - can't wait to come out. She's bursting. As far as she's concerned, Sam is already dead. But there's the necessary paperwork to be done first. Name changed by deed poll, a new passport, driver's licence, bank account - the banal detail of an extraordinary transformation.