News: Speaker Pelosi warns against hate speech, cites Harvey Milk

Affirmations NEW logo-0208 smSpeaker Pelosi warns against hate speech, cites Harvey Milk
The Victory Fund

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) encouraged Americans to be mindful of harsh rhetoric, citing the murder of San Francisco supervisor Harvey Milk and mayor George Moscone as an example of how dangerous language can translate to politically-motivated violence.

Pelosi reportedly became choked up and “teary-eyed” during her weekly press conference.  Acknowledging her strong belief in the freedom of speech and expression,  she warned that leaders need to take greater responsibility for their words so as not to “incite” violence.

The Hill reports:

Pelosi, referencing the assassination of gay rights activist and San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk in 1978, said Americans must “curb our enthusiasm” in some political debates.

“I have concerns about some of the language that is being used because I saw this myself in the late ’70s in San Francisco, this kind of rhetoric was very frightening and it created a climate in which violence took place,” Pelosi said.

“And so I wish that we would all, again, curb our enthusiasm in some of the statements that are made, understanding that some of the people — the ears it is falling on are not as balanced as the person making the statement might assume,” the speaker cautioned.

News: Gulf War Vet Discusses Intersex Identity

Affirmations NEW logo-0208 smGulf War Vet Discusses Intersexuality
By Julie Bolcer
The Advocate

The case of elite South African runner Caster Semenya brought the issue of intersexuality into international focus, for better or worse. This Saturday, the National Geographic Channel examines the topic of gender ambiguity on its Explorer  series, including an account from Gulf War veteran Rudy Alaniz, who discovered through an MRI that he possessed ovaries and a womb.

Alaniz drove transport trucks in the Gulf War, after which he was treated for a back injury at a military hospital in Germany. During that time, as he recalls in the video below, an MRI revealed that his anatomy included ovaries, and a “small, underdeveloped womb.”

“So I’m not a boy and I’m not a girl,” Alaniz said. “I’m not a man, and I’m not a woman. And that made me feel dead inside. That is where instead of just being confused and depressed and feeling a loss, then it’s, ‘I’m not even human.’ That’s where I really felt like a freak of nature,” he said.

Scientists say that thousands of people around the world are born intersexed each year, often possessing extra chromosomes that give them gender characteristics that do not conform to the binary system of male and female. In the case of Alaniz, who possesses XXY chromosomes, he suspects that his gender was decided at birth through surgery.

News: Insurance Company Must Pay $10 Million For Revoking Policy Of Teen With HIV

Affirmations NEW logo-0208 smInsurance Company Must Pay $10 Million For Revoking Policy Of Teen With HIV
by Murray Waas
Huffington Post

The South Carolina Supreme Court has ordered an insurance company to pay $10 million for wrongly revoking the insurance policy of a 17-year-old college student after he tested positive for HIV. The court called the 2002 decision by the insurance company “reprehensible.”

That’s the most an insurance company has ever been ordered to pay in a case involving the practice known as rescission, in which insurance companies retroactively cancel coverage for policyholders based on alleged misstatements – sometimes right after diagnoses of life-threatening diseases.

The ruling emerges from a conservative Southern state with one of the most pro-business climates in the country. And it comes as progressive Democrats on Capitol Hill are pressing for health care reforms, such as a public insurance option, that reflect wariness about the private insurance industry’s motives.

The Supreme Court on Monday upheld a lower court’s verdict against Fortis Insurance, now known as Assurant. The trial jury had awarded the former college student, Jerome Mitchell, $15 million in punitive damages; the Supreme Court reduced that amount by $5 million.

Mitchell learned that he had HIV when, while heading to college, he donated blood. Fortis then rescinded his coverage, citing what turned out to be an erroneous note from a nurse in his medical records that indicated that he might have been diagnosed prior to his obtaining his insurance policy.

Before the cancellation of the policy, an underwriter working for Fortis wrote to a committee considering whether or not to rescind his policy: “Technically, we do not have the results of the HIV tests. This is the only entry in the medical records regarding HIV status. Is it sufficient?” The underwriter’s concerns were ignored and the rescission went forward.

In the ruling, Chief Justice Jean Hoefer wrote: “We find ample support in the record that Fortis’ conduct was reprehensible … Fortis demonstrated an indifference to Mitchell’s life and a reckless disregard to his health and safety.”

An investigation this summer by the House Energy and Commerce Committee, and earlier ones by state regulators in California, New York and Connecticut, found that thousands of vulnerable and seriously ill policyholders have had their coverage canceled by many of the nation’s largest insurance companies without any legal basis. The congressional committee found that three insurance companies alone made at least $300 million over five years from rescission. One of those three companies was Assurant.

In Febuary 2008, a private arbitration judge in Los Angeles ordered Health Net Inc. to pay more than $9 million to a breast cancer patient whose health insurance it revoked shortly after her diagnosis and while she was undergoing chemotherapy. The plaintiff in that case, Patsy Bates, a then-52-year-old grandmother and hair-salon owner, was unable to continue her chemotherapy for several months.

During the case, evidence emerged that Health Net had paid bonuses to employees to reward them based on the number of policyholders they had rescinded. The judge who awarded Bates the $9 million said in his decision: “It’s difficult to imagine a policy more reprehensible than tying bonuses to encourage the rescission of health insurance that keeps the public well and alive.”

William Shernoff, the attorney who represented Bates, said in an interview Wednesday that he was not unhappy that there was a new verdict larger than the one he won for Bates. “I am glad to see that the courts in other parts of the country are coming down hard on this reprehensible practice of dumping sick patients,” he said. “It has been a practice going on decades, is widespread, and ruins lives.”

Shernoff currently said he has more than 100 pending cases against California insurance companies on behalf of patients he alleges were wrongly rescinded. He said he has already settled about 90 similar cases over the last three years.

President Obama cited other cases of rescission in his recent speech before a joint session of Congress as a major reason that health reform is necessary.

Obama cited the case of a retired Texas nurse, Robin Beaton, who had her heath insurance canceled by her insurance company as she was about to undergo breast cancer surgery. As a result, Beaton had to delay her surgery for five months. In the interim, the size of the mass of her tumor had grown from 2 centimeters to 7 centimeters, greatly reducing her chances of survival.

A “woman from Texas was about to get a double mastectomy when her insurance company canceled her policy because she forgot to declare a case of acne,” the President asserted in his speech, “By the time she had insurance reinstated, her breast cancer more then doubled in size. This is heart breaking. It is wrong. And no one should be treated that way in the United States of America.”

Obama wasn’t exactly correct in his telling of Beaton’s ordeal. Beaton’s insurance was canceled because a doctor wrote that she potentially had a precancerous lesion on her face. Further investigation showed that she instead had acne. But even after her physicians pointed out the error, her insurance remained rescinded. Only with the help of her congressman, was she able to pressure her insurance company to pay for her breast cancer surgery–five months later.

News: TV’s ‘Newlywed Game’ features first gay couple

Affirmations NEW logo-0208 smTV’s ‘Newlywed Game’ features first gay couple
by David Bauder
Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Even as states and jurisdictions made gay and lesbian marriages legal, “The Newlywed Game” has played it straight – until now.

The long-running game show, now on the GSN cable network, said Wednesday it will feature its first gay couple this season on a celebrity edition. George Takei, who played Mr. Sulu on “Star Trek,” will appear with his partner, Brad Altman.

They just celebrated their first anniversary after being married in Los Angeles last September, but they’re nothing like the giggly young couples the game is known for. Takei and Altman have been together for 22 years.

“What we want is to display the normality and the joy of having a happy union,” Takei said.

“The Newlywed Game” has been on TV off and on since it premiered in prime-time on ABC in 1967, mostly with Bob Eubanks as host. Singer Carnie Wilson is now host of the show, which is in its second season on GSN and done well in the ratings for the network.

The show always teased and tested couples about how well they know each other, with the slightly lascivious Eubanks delighting in questions about “making whoopee.”

It has since featured older couples, interracial couples and some who have lived together many years before marriage. Even long-ago contestants were retested as part of “Oldyweds Game” segments.

Kelly Goode, GSN’s programming chief, said she couldn’t speculate on why gay couples were never included in the past because GSN, the former Game Show Network, has only been responsible for the show for two years. She said it was in the game’s rules that the couple needed to have a legally-recognized marriage to play.

The change “made sense for GSN,” Goode said. “It seems like the show has always reflected the times in terms of marriages depicted and this felt like the next logical step.”

Takei and Altman haven’t taped their episode yet but expect to do so soon. GSN hopes to air in October.

The show is sprinkling a handful of celebrity players and their new spouses in this season, including Davy Jones of The Monkees, Christopher Knight of “The Brady Bunch” and Jonny Fairplay of “Survivor.”

Wilson said she had been pressing behind-the-scenes to have an all-gay edition of the show. She’s excited about Takei’s appearance.

“It’s needed at this point,” she said. “To me, this is not anything political. This is not a political statement. This show has always been about couples and how well they know each other.”

Dan Gainor, a vice president at the conservative Culture and Media Institute, said the move was a publicity stunt for a show most Americans didn’t realize was still on the air. Despite Wilson’s views, Gainor said he believed it was a political statement for the California-based show and network, coming in a state where voters banned same-sex nuptials months after Takei and Altman married.

“They’re trying to use TV and the movies to set the gay agenda and make it mainstream,” Gainor said.

Even though they’ve been a committed couple for 22 years, Takei said he and Altman are quietly preparing for their appearance. He’s taking careful note of what his partner orders in restaurants and wears.

“To be included in something we never felt we’d be included in is very satisfying,” he said.

News: First Woman Exec Director Named for NYC LGBT Center

Affirmations NEW logo-0208 smFirst woman exec director named for NYC LGBT Center
365Gay.com

The NYC Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center of New York’s Board of Directors today announced that they have unanimously chosen Glennda Testone to be the Center’s new Executive Director.  Established in 1983, the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center has grown to become the largest LGBT multi-service organization on the East Coast and second largest LGBT community center in the world.

“At a time when the opportunities and challenges faced by our community are limitless, the Center is a lifeline for hundreds of thousands of LGBT people,” said Testone.  “I am honored and excited to lead the Center in providing the kind of thriving, nurturing community that we all want to come home to.  It is an ambitious goal, but my commitment to serving the LGBT community, the passion of the people involved and the possibilities for this institution are also limitless.” 

Throughout her career, Testone has been a leader in the fields of social justice for women and LGBT people.  Testone joins the LGBT Community Center from The Women’s Media Center (WMC), where she served as the Vice President for three years and created and launched the highly successful Progressive Women’s Voices media training program. The Women’s Media Center was founded in 2005 by Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan and Gloria Steinem to make women visible and powerful in the media.   The Progressive Women’s Voices program is responsible for providing media and leadership training for some of the Progressive movement’s preeminent leaders.

Prior to the WMC, Testone led the Program Division as the Senior Director of Media Programs at the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD).  During her six years at GLAAD, Testone played a pivotal role in key milestones in LGBT media activism, most notably leading the team that persuaded The New York Times in 2003 to change its longstanding policy to include same sex couples on its wedding pages.  Testone has served as a spokesperson for GLAAD and for the LGBT movement, appearing on CNN, FOX News, and MSNBC, and in outlets such as The Boston Globe, The New York Times, The Chicago Tribune, Time Out and W magazine.

The daughter of a school administrator and a social worker community center director, Testone was brought up recognizing the power of service and activism. Testone will become the Center’s the first woman at its helm and has been in leadership roles within the LGBT and women’s movements for over a decade, launching programs for LGBT youth, families, women and activists. Testone graduated from Syracuse University magna cum laude with honors and degrees in Broadcast Journalism and Philosophy.  She received the Syracuse University LGBT Foundation Award for Outstanding Alumni in 2006.  Testone got her Master’s degree from The Ohio State University in Women’s Studies.

Testone succeeds previous director Richard Burns, who led the Center for 22 years.  Center board president Bruce Anderson has served as interim executive director for the past eight months.

“As a board president and an interim executive director, I have seen the work of the Center firsthand.  And I have seen the staff in action.   It has been a privilege and has also offered me a unique perspective on the kind of leader the Center will need to propel its work forward,” says Anderson.  “This organization needs and deserves a leader with a contemporary perspective, an inspirational vision and the management expertise necessary to bring that vision to life.  We have found that in Glennda.”

Board members Gwen Marcus, Executive Vice President and General Counsel at Showtime Networks, and Brian Offutt, Senior Vice President Creative Operations at Nickelodeon/MTVN Kids and Family Group, led the search process.

“The Center’s history and reputation brought us a field of impressive candidates, each of whom understood the challenge and brought a depth and breadth of experience and commitment to LGBT equality.  But in Glennda Testone, we found that and more,” says Marcus.

Offutt added, “We found a dynamic leader who we believe will be at the forefront of the next generation of advocacy and services for the LGBT community.  Glennda inspired all of us and we cannot wait to begin the next chapter of the Center’s history under her leadership.”

Testone was appointed by the Center’s Board of Directors at the culmination of a comprehensive national search conducted by Philips Oppenheim.
 
Celebrating its 25th anniversary in 2008, the Center has grown to become the largest LGBT multi-service organization on the East Coast and second largest LGBT community center in the world. Every week, 6,000 people visit the Center, and more than 300 groups meet here. The Center has four programmatic departments: Adult Mental Health and Social Services (including Center CARE and Center CARE Recovery); Youth & Family Services, Cultural Programs; and Advocacy. The Center offers programs and activities that provide adult and youth counseling, social services and referrals, educational forums, advocacy, community organizing opportunities, coalition building projects, leadership development workshops, and cultural programs.

News: Ohio’s House Approves Bill to Protect Gay Rights in Housing, Employment

Affirmations NEW logo-0208 smHouse Approves Bill to Protect Gay Rights in Housing, Employment
By William Hershey
Dayton Daily News

In what supporters considered an historic vote, the Ohio House on Tuesday, Sept. 15, approved legislation banning discrimination in employment and housing based on sexual orientation or gender identity.

The vote was 56-38.

The bill now goes to the Senate where passage is less likely. Lynne Bowman, executive director of Equality Ohio, said supporters have 16 more months before this session of the legislature ends to win final approval. Bowman’s group advocates for equality for gay, lesbian, transgender and bisexual Ohioans.

“This is a new opportunity,” Bowman said. Twenty states and the District of Columbia and 17 Ohio cities already have similar laws in effect, she said.

The vote was the first ever by the House and Senate on such legislation, said Bowman.

Rep. Peggy Lehner, R-Kettering, was one of five Republicans who joined 51 Democrats in supporting the bill. Lehner said that as a long-time opponent of abortion, she supported the “unalienable right to life” contained in the Declaration of Independence. She said she also supported the unalienable rights to liberty and the pursuit of happiness, also in the Declaration of Independence.

Two of the other Republican supporters were Reps. Ross McGregor of Springfield, a joint sponsor of House Bill 176, and Terry Blair of Washington Township.

Rep. Lynn Wachtmann, R-Napoleon, angrily denounced the bill.

“Keep your hands and your morals and your immoral beliefs to yourselves,” he said, shaking a finger at Democrats. “Don’t punish those who disagree with you…”

This is the fourth legislative session in which such legislation has been proposed, said Bowman.

Advocates accelerated their efforts after Ohio voters in 2004 overwhelmingly approved a constitutional amendment banning same sex marriage.

The House gallery was filled with supporters of the bill.

News: One Sentenced for Attacking Gay Teen

Affirmations NEW logo-0208 smOne Sentenced for Attacking Gay Teen
Newschannel 3, WWMT

KALAMAZOO COUNTY, Mich. (NEWSCHANNEL 3) – It was a savage beating that touched off emotions in West Michigan and across the country, when a gay teen from Portage claimed that two other teens beat him up because he was gay.

On Monday, one of those teens was sentenced for the beating. Newschannel 3 was there in the courtroom.

The hearing took place in a small room in the basement of the family court, with the victim’s family and the assailant’s family within a foot of each other. Emotions ran high before the 16-year-old heard his sentence.

“It’s still a horrific crime that happened, my son and me are still healing as a family,” said Lynette Rocha, mother of Steve Harmon, who was beaten.

In that small room, Rocha worked to bring up the big and terrible feelings about what happened to her son, who says he was assaulted because he was gay.

“My son has suffered significant bruising, blackened eyes, busted lip, contusions to his head, and a fracture on his cheekbone which still may require surgery, and that’s just the physical damage,” said Rocha.

The 16-year-old who admitted to the beating sat a foot away, hearing the mother’s pleas for punishment.

“He’s always looking over his shoulder, he sleeps with his door open, and he makes sure his father or myself is awake,” said Rocha.

On Monday, the 16-year-old learned that he will spend the next six to nine months at Kalamazoo County’s juvenile home, and that he will have to pay for medical costs from the beating as well as write a letter of apology.

“I’m glad that he’s getting help with counseling, the individual who assaulted my son, but I don’t think he’s aware of the impact that this has caused my family,” said Rocha.

For Harmon’s stepfather, Steve Esman, the justice handed out on Monday was only half-justice, since he believes that the other teen involved hasn’t paid for what he’s done.

“It’s good that they’ve got him in here now for what he’s done, they still got one more they need to lock up for his role in it, I don’t think six to nine months is enough,” said Esman.

News: Nominees Announced for 1st Annual GLAAD Media Awards in Advertising

Affirmations NEW logo-0208 smNominees Announced for 1st Annual GLAAD Media Awards in Advertising
OutGayLife.com

The nominees for the 1st Annual GLAAD Media Awards in Advertising presented by Southwest Airlines were announced on Monday.

Corporations like Progressive, Southwest, Wells Fargo, Travelocity and many others will be celebrated for their fair, accurate, and inclusive representations of LGBT people in marketing and advertising campaigns.

“As with other forms of media, advertising has the power to change hearts and minds,” said GLAAD President Jarrett Barrios. “Companies that promote fair, accurate and inclusive images of the LGBT community in advertising send an important message to their customers, to corporations and to any consumer who sees their ads. We will be recognizing those companies that do just that, and in so doing, set a standard to which other companies may aspire.”

GLAAD will also honor Subaru for the corporation’s longstanding and public commitment to the LGBT consumer, as well as Mitchell Gold and Bob Williams for including LGBT stories in advertising for their company Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams, and for their personal efforts to advocate for LGBT equality.

For a complete list of nominees and ads, please visit www.glaad.org/advertisingawards/nominees.

The 1st Annual GLAAD Media Awards in Advertising presented by Southwest Airlines will be held in New York City on October 27, 2009 at New World Stages, 340 W. 50th Street. To purchase tickets for the event, please visit www.glaad.org/advertisingawards.

News: Virtually Normal: An Update

Affirmations NEW logo-0208 smVirtually Normal: An Update
by Andrew Sullivan
The Daily Dish, The Atlantic

The culture is indeed changing. A married lesbian will be a judge on the most mainstream – and red state popular – TV show; and the man who was once Doogie Howser is now an openly gay man in Hollywood, with a hit sit-com and a gig hosting the Tonys and the Emmys. Both Neil and Ellen are unthreatening types  -  and yet also very recognizably gay in affect. What’s different about them, and why I admire both immensely, is their achievement of effortlessness with the gay thing. They both seem real. Their sexual orientation is part of who they are, but who they are is also larger and more complicated than that. It’s a real achievement – for them and America.

Read more…

News: Barney Opposes DOMA Repeal For Now

Affirmations NEW logo-0208 smBarney Opposes DOMA Repeal For Now
by Andrew Sullivan
The Daily Dish, The Atlantic

He won’t co-sponsor a bill to remove the most anti-gay legislation in modern times:

Frank said in an interview Friday with the Blade that he’s not a co-sponsor of the legislation because he has a “strategic difference” with people supporting the repeal legislation.

“It’s not anything that’s achievable in the near term,” he said. “I think getting [the Employment Non-Discrimination Act], a repeal of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,’ and full domestic partner benefits for federal employees will take up all of what we can do and maybe more in this Congress.” 

Frank also said that advocacy for the “certainty provision,” as described by Nadler, would create “political problems” in Congress.

“The provision that says you can take your benefits as you travel, I think, will stir up unnecessary opposition with regard to the question of are you trying to export it to other states,” he said. “If we had a chance to pass that, it would be a different story, but I don’t think it’s a good idea to rekindle that debate when there’s no chance of passage in the near term.”

Nadler defended the legislation in a statement, saying that claims made by repeal opponents shouldn’t prevent the bill’s introduction.

“Mr. Frank knows better than anyone that our opponents will falsely claim that any DOMA repeal bill ‘exports marriage’ in an effort to generate fear and misunderstanding,” Nadler said. “But the dishonest tactics of our opponents should not stop us from aggressively pushing to end this horrific discrimination now, as is the consensus of the nation’s top LGBT groups who all support this approach.”

Nadler emphasized that the proposed bill wouldn’t force any state to marry gay couples or recognize same-sex couples under state law.

It’s a real kick in the teeth – and HRC hasn’t responded. To have the leading gay congressman say that gay couples can wait helps put into perspective Obama’s caution.

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