President Biden & the Democrats roll over on Roe & LGBTQ+ Equality

2022-05-29 16:18:25 By : Mr. ZDAN Shanghai

Governor Newsom & Legislative Leaders to expedite gun reform legislation

Trans Inclusive Health Care Act passes California State Senate

Senator Wiener’s No Tax Exemption for Insurrection Act, passes Senate

Assembly passes bill protects patients & providers from anti-choice states

Right-wing extremist provocateur threatens to ‘hunt’ LGBT supporters

California & New Zealand partner to advance global climate leadership

Eric Strong angling to become LA County’s first Black Sheriff

Triple A: Drivers will pay record breaking prices this holiday weekend

West Hollywood in brief- City government in action this week

California’s rent relief programs distribute over $5 billion

West Hollywood in brief- City government in action this week

West Hollywood in brief- City government in action this week

City of West Hollywood’s LGBTQ+ Arts Festival 2022 kicks-off

West Hollywood in brief- City government in action this week

City of West Hollywood fundraiser for refugees from Ukraine May 22

Reminder: 101 closed through DTLA until 10pm Sunday

LA-DWP & Mayor Garcetti announce new outdoor watering restrictions

Hollywood residents angered over Sunset Blvd. homeless encampment

Lawsuit against USC in sexual abuse case of 80 male students settled

LAPD asks for public’s help in Melrose District homicide

Longtime LGBTQ+ journalist & editor Thomas Senzee dies at 54

Trans Palm Springs Mayor responds to anti-LGBTQ+ Texas Governor

Historic swearing in of Lisa Middleton as Palm Springs Mayor

Everything you need to know about Palm Springs Pride this weekend

The LGBTQ Center of the Desert reopens in Palm Springs

San Diego County man charged with a hate crime after homophobic attack

Trans woman ‘viciously attacked’ in men’s jail cell lawsuit says

US Navy Fleet Oiler & supply ship, USNS Harvey Milk launches

Dignitaries tour the 60% completed USNS Harvey Milk

Federal probe into former backer of Prop 8 in ‘pay or play’ scheme

Governor Hochul: New Yorkers can use “X” as a gender marker

Plea bargain: 7 month sentence in homophobic attack in Washington D.C.

Out New York City man dies after visit to gay venue in Hell’s Kitchen

‘Drag Queen Story Hour’ axed by USAF base- Sen. Rubio takes credit

Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt signs anti-Trans ‘Bathroom Bill’ into law

LGBTQ+ lawmakers in Latin America pledge to end conversion therapy in region

Senegal advocacy group demands better treatment of LGBTQ+ prisoners

U.S. official meets with Brittney Griner in Russia

100+ confirmed cases of monkeypox in 12 countries & spreading

Brazil LGBTQ+ activists, HIV/AIDS service providers fear Bolsonaro reelection

Why I’m running: Christy Smith

Why I’m running: Ron Galperin

Texas Trans girl assaulted over GOP lies about Uvalde shooting

Why I’m running: Rick Chavez Zbur

David Hogg demands Congress gets ‘One Thing Done’ on gun safety

Ellen signs off after 19 seasons

Crown Prosecution Service UK charges Kevin Spacey with sexual assault

Equality Florida’s Nadine Smith named to Time’s Top 100 list for 2022

Blow your mind with today’s hottest Queer TV- 2nd annual OutFronts

Join Joel Kim Booster on ‘Fire Island’ this summer

Ellen signs off after 19 seasons

Check out final season of ‘Grace and Frankie’ — it ends well

New trailer gives first glimpse into new ‘Queer as Folk’

Omar, Netflix’s Elite, & Queer Palestinian representation

‘LA: A Queer History’ Celebrating Pride Month

The annual LA Times 101 list is here at last

Hit Instagram smash burger pop-up Chris N Eddy’s debuts in Hollywood

LA’s comeback, a lesbian community leader has a starring role

West Hollywood’s ‘Out On Robertson’ official launch

Give Daddy what he deserves

“Hadestown” now at LA’s Ahmanson Theater

Barrier-breaking lesbian does a ‘Death-Defying Escape’ in her new play

Near-naked Ambition: ‘The Comics Strip’ is getting more exposure

‘NEA Four’ performance artist Fleck still pushing buttons in latest show

‘Jamie’ comes to America in triumphant Ahmanson premiere

Join Joel Kim Booster on ‘Fire Island’ this summer

‘Everything Everywhere’ does the multiverse right

‘Firebird’ soars with tale of love during Cold War

Same-sex kiss restored in Disney-Pixar ‘Lightyear’ after employee outrage

64th Grammy Awards return live from Las Vegas

Brian Justin Crum brings Freddie Mercury roaring back to life

‘Blue Hearts’ beating: an interview with Bob Mould

Eurovision changes course, removes Russia from competition

Janet Jackson doc premieres this weekend

Danica Roem’s new book is far from a typical politico’s story

‘Queer Country’ explores origins of growing genre of music

Two lively, entertaining new books from Deaf creators

Molly Shannon’s memoir will make you roar

Alice Walker sets the record straight in new book

How do you just sit down in the face of an assault on American freedom led by a tiny minority of religious fanatics and legal outliers

By James Finn | DETROIT – A bulldozer almost ripped my arm off at a protest years ago… when AIDS was killing my friends and loved ones in frightening numbers. I was with Act Up at the home of a pharma exec, doing what we did — making powerful men understand they had “skin in the game.”

We had to make them see that if they continued taking decisions that would kill us, they would face serious personal and social consequences, including incurring the wrath and loathing of their neighbors.

We had to show them their actions weren’t just an intellectual game they could forget when they came home to their landscaped mansions, wives, and children.

Remember that time we draped a giant condom over Senator Jesse Helms’ D.C. home? We were getting the nation’s attention PLUS showing Helms he had skin in the game. We were getting his neighbors involved, on purpose.

I didn’t lose my arm that day, and our tactics worked.

In the end, the American people rallied to our side. Friends and neighbors pushed WITH us against politicians, pharma execs, and judges — demanding human-to-human that policy makers elevate the fight against HIV to a true emergency, and later that they make life-saving medication affordable and accessible to all.

We had the public on our side very early on in the AIDS crisis. Getting powerful policy makers on board was much harder. We could not have done it without the neighbors.

Americans gasped in collective shock last week after somebody leaked Justice Samuel Alito’s draft opinion overturning Roe v. Wade. Should the draft become the majority opinion, millions of women would lose the fundamental human right to control their own bodies. Millions of women and their doctors would immediately face being criminalized for ending pregnancies. Many women will die.

We have to get the neighbors involved.

As I wrote a week ago, should the draft become the majority opinion, human rights for many groups, especially LGBTQ people, would be at severe risk. Alito’s reasoning destroys the foundation of “privacy” rights that have led to decades of judicial protection for minority groups.

The legal reasoning the justices have put forward to overturn Roe would pull the carpet out from under constitutional rights like same-sex marriage, access to contraception, and even private sexual expression. Conservatives are ALREADY announcing they will go after these rights.

We have to get the neighbors involved.

Republican Senator John Cornyn of Texas has repeatedly opined that the high court wrongfully invented the right to same-sex marriage. He’s far from alone. Sen. Mike Braun of Indianahas even told reporters he believes interracial marriage should have been left up to the states.

We have to get the neighbors involved.

Alito’s draft opinion knocks the legs out from under the ruling that ordered states to stay out of adults’ bedrooms. Think Republicans won’t fight to punish people for same-gender sex? They’re doing it already, as I wrote last year, reporting on scores of cases in which Republicans are forcing gay men to continue registering as sex offenders for consensual sex they were convicted of before the Supreme Court struck down the laws they were convicted under.

We have to get the neighbors involved.

Sen. John Cornyn's questions to Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson make it clear that 1. Republicans are still hung up on gay marriage and 2. still hopeful that SCOTUS will reverse Obergefell pic.twitter.com/VFLDMTrBIC

Think the Republicans would never REALLY go after contraception, marriage equality, or sexual privacy? According to Paul Waldman in the Washington Post, you’d better think again. He writes that liberals are, if anything, not taking the danger seriously enough.

There is a push within the antiabortion movement — which will need a new focus once Roe is overturned — to go after contraception. Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) recently denounced the ruling in Griswold, and she’s not alone. Republican states are already moving to limit access to birth control in various ways, and this is a clear target of many in the movement. They will likely begin by targeting Plan B, then IUDs and the pill.

He adds that while Alito’s draft includes language denying court intent to nullify other rights, “many legal experts read it to suggest that [same-sex marriage] could be the next precedent to be reversed.”

Alito can deny intent all he wants, but his reasoning speaks for itself. If the Constitution cannot protect a woman’s right to the sovereignty of her own body, then the Constitution cannot protect Americans from almost any State intrusion into their most intimate private lives.

“The right is not hiding its plans,” says Waldman. “All you have to do is believe them.”

Don’t like me at your house? Get out of my uterus,” chanted a group of protestors last night outside Justice Alito’s Virginia home. Protestors have been targeting conservative justices’ homes for several days, copying Act Up tactics.

Engage the neighbors. Show powerful policy makers they have skin in the game.

The nation is ready to roar.

Over 70% of the American public support Roe v Wade, believe women MUST have control over their own bodies, believe the State must have no power to stick its nose into private lives. The American people BELIEVE our Constitution protects us and must continue to protect us from State tyranny.

Roughly 70% of the American public say the Supreme Court must not overturn Roe. A slim majority of Republicans agree. That’s right, a majority of rank-and-file Republicans oppose what the conservative justices on the high court are about to do.

You’d probably not guess that from the Democratic establishment’s anemic reaction.

President Joe Biden is out to lunch. He’s referred to the crises a couple times. He affirmed he believes the “right to choose is fundamental.” But does he support a federal law to protect women? Kinda sorta, but not really. He opposes changing the Senate filibuster rule, the only way Congress could protect women’s basic human rights.

Has Biden fired up the American people? No. Is he calling for major court reform? No. Is he doing anything? Well, he made a speech today about inflation. Didn’t mention the Supreme Court or Roe.

He IS chastising protestors at the justices’ homes, telling them last night he doesn’t support violence or vandalism — which, of course, but … hello? I haven’t seen any reports of violence. And I’ve looked hard for such reports. Where does that even come from? Why is Biden taking the time to lecture protestors over violence they aren’t committing when he could be rallying the nation to the defense of liberty?

Why isn’t Biden helping us educate the justices, helping us show them they have skin in the game, helping us engage their neighbors? Why isn’t he letting them know the Democrats will fight like hell to enact court reforms to overturn their radical attacks on liberty?

Yesterday a prominent Democrat organizer on Twitter urged protestors to stay away from the justices’ homes. She tweeted, “let’s not involve the children & neighbors. Protest at the Supreme Court & at their offices.”

My response? “When I was in Act Up, we always protested at the homes of policy makers and pharma executives — BECAUSE involving their neighbors was critically important. We had to let them know that taking decisions what would kill us would cause them to be reviled as people and neighbors.”

When I was in Act Up, we always protested at the homes of policy makers and pharma executives — BECAUSE involving their neighbors was critically important. We had to let them know that taking decisions what would kill us would cause them to be reviled as people and neighbors.

I got 150-ish likes and a few retweets. She got thousands, not from Republicans and conservatives, from Democrats who call themselves members of the Twitter “Resistance.” If urging people not to engage the neighbors is “resisting,” I’d hate to see what collaboration looks like.

Here’s my plea to Joe Biden: Mr. President, why will you not fight for liberty when over 70% of the nation wants you to? How do you choose to take no action when the bulk of the nation would stand behind you, roar with you, fight beside you? How do you just sit down in the face of an assault on American freedom led by a tiny minority of religious fanatics and legal outliers?

What’s it going to take to convince you to lead, to inspire the American people instead of counseling us toward apathy?

We’re waiting, Mr. President, for you to seize the day, to stand up and rally us to your side. We will fight with you, but you have to ask us. You have to lead from the front. I guarantee that if you do that, we will surge to the polls for you and the Democratic Party in November.

If not? If you intend to stay apathetic and counsel apathy? What are we supposed to do? Why should should we even feel like voting? Many LGBTQ voters and our allies are already frustrated with you about your apathy over the Equality Act. This dwarfs that.

I suggest you think about that, Mr. President. Very hard. We’re waiting for you to step up!

James Finn is a columnist for the LA Blade, a former Air Force intelligence analyst, an alumnus of Queer Nation and Act Up NY, and an “agented” but unpublished novelist. Send questions, comments, and story ideas to [email protected]

The preceding article was previously published by Prism & Pen– Amplifying LGBTQ voices through the art of storytelling and is republished by permission.

A failed commitment to promote inclusive education in Puerto Rico

Senators demand parental blocking for gay/Trans TV characters

Eric Strong angling to become LA County’s first Black Sheriff

Plea bargain: 7 month sentence in homophobic attack in Washington D.C.

Why I’m running: Christy Smith

Why was this teen girl assaulted by a grown man she’d never met, harassed by four strangers who could tell she was trans

By James Finn | DETROIT – “Oh look, it has a dick,” snarled one of four men last night outside an El Paso library where Tracey had just finished her high school homework before heading to the halfway house where she lives because her parents kicked her out for being transgender.

In a phone interview today, Tracey told me the man grabbed her arm and forced her body around to make her look at him, saying “Yeah, you know they’re perverting kids instead of killing them.”

She had no idea what he meant, but she was scared, like she says she usually is on the streets of El Paso these days. “I’m only 17!” she told the man who grabbed her.

Another man said, “Yeah, you know it was one of your sisters who killed those kids. You’re a mental health freak!”

She twisted away and rushed off on her bicycle, stopping to phone the El Paso Police, who refused to take an assault report. Hours later, during a phone session with a Rainbow Youth Project counselor, Tracey heard about false rumors flying around the Internet — that the horrific mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas had been committed by a “transsexual leftist illegal alien.” The rumor was amplified in a big way by Paul Gosar, a dentist and Arizona Republican Congressmember who styles himself a doctor on Twitter.

Nobody is quite sure where that false claim got started, but it spread rapidly, based on photos of a person unrelated to the attack. The 18-year-old man who killed 19 children and 2 adults yesterday is neither transgender nor an illegal immigrant.

Gosar amplifying this scapegoating rumor is not unusual. According to Brody Levesque, writing about the Uvalde shooting in the LA Blade, “Gosar is an anti-immigration, anti-vaxxer, radical right hardliner who routinely cozies up to white nationalists.” He’s typical of the Trump-supporting hard-right faction that now dominates the GOP.

I’ve felt sick to my stomach since late yesterday when I learned about the horrific mass shooting about 80 miles outside San Antonio. I couldn’t stop crying for the parents of those 19 little children who are never coming home again. I despaired at a staunch, reflexive Republican reaction against even minimal gun regulation. I sat glued to President Biden addressing the nation, and I thrilled to Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr’s impassioned plea for action on gun control.

I had no idea as I was mourning for those children and their devastated parents that a GOP talking point about mental health would soon dominate Fox News and conservative social media. I never could have conceived that the narrative was already twisting itself up with that other GOP mantra, that trans teens are mentally ill and that people who support them are committing child abuse.

Tracey is not mentally ill. She’s not dangerous. She’s not hurting anybody. But she spent two months this spring living on the streets because fellow students threatened to out her as trans to her parents. When she tried to get ahead of that by coming out to her parents on her own terms, they told her to get out.

She goes to high school every day watching her back, because students, teachers and other staff are hostile to her. She used to confide in a kind guidance counselor, but she doesn’t anymore because the counselor got in trouble after people falsely claimed she’d encouraged Tracey to “become” trans.

Tracey told me that isn’t true. She started socially transitioning in 9th grade before she met the counselor. She just liked sitting down for a few minutes with a kind adult.

Tracey can’t talk to her counselor at a community clinic anymore either. They shut their doors to trans teens a few weeks ago when the Texas government began investigations based on Texas AG Ken Paxton’s legal finding that supporting transition is child abuse. It doesn’t matter that Tracey just wants to talk and get support. The clinic isn’t taking any chances.

The only people Tracey could turn to for support last night were at the Rainbow Youth Project hundreds of miles away in Indiana. They calmed her down after her assault, listened to her fears, and provided as much emotional support as possible over the phone. Then they called the El Paso Police Department for her, who once again refused to take a report. (The EPPD did not immediately respond my request for comment.)

A Rainbow Youth volunteer flew to El Paso from out of state two months ago to advocate for Tracey. They got her off the streets and into a room in a halfway house Tracey calls “nice and comfortable.” She says she calls them when she’s feeling down, and they often check in on her. She sounds a little weepy when she tells me the only kind people she can to talk to now don’t live in Texas. She hopes that changes when she turns 18.

Tracey doesn’t want to hang up when I’m ready to start writing this article, but I need to focus, to ask myself why this teen girl with a soft Texas accent got assaulted last night by a grown man she’d never met, harrassed by four strangers in their early 20s to late 30s who could tell she was trans and wanted to blame child killings on that.

Look, the U.S. has an epidemic of mass shootings going on. We must confront that together as a nation. So, how about we stop the scapegoating? I don’t know what’s happened to Republican leadership, why they won’t face up to gun violence, but I can see something clearly. They keep demonizing LGBTQ people. Because that’s apparently easier than tackling tough problems.

And last night? That scapegoating terrified a teen girl just trying to ride home on her bike.

How about we knock it off? How about we leave people like Tracey alone? How about we tell Paul Gosar to do his real job instead of stirring up hate? How about we stand up for people who aren’t hurting anyone?

James Finn is a columnist for the LA Blade, a former Air Force intelligence analyst, an alumnus of Queer Nation and Act Up NY, and an “agented” but unpublished novelist. Send questions, comments, and story ideas to [email protected]

The preceding article was previously published by Prism & Pen– Amplifying LGBTQ voices through the art of storytelling and is republished by permission.

An archbishop complains Speaker Pelosi is a source of “scandal” harming the Church. So, let’s talk about scandal & who’s really causing it

By James Finn | DETROIT – A powerful U.S. Catholic bishop is at it again, forcing himself into politics trying to make an elected leader knuckle under to Church “discipline.” Enough! It’s bad enough this guy is a notorious anti-LGBTQ bigot reviled by many San Francisco Catholics.

It’s bad enough he’s defying Pope Francis’s directive not to use Church sacraments as weapons. But when he tries to force House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to change how she represents her constituents, he’s gone more than just a bridge too far.

The archbishop complains Pelosi is a source of “scandal” harming the Church. So, let’s talk about scandal and who’s really causing it. But first, a rundown on the facts:

Salvatore Joseph Cordileone, the Catholic Archbishop of San Francisco, tweeted yesterday that U.S. House Speaker Pelosi “is not to be admitted to Holy Communion” because of her opposition to criminalizing abortion in the United States. In details reported by the New York Times, the archbishop ordered Pelosi in a letter not to present herself for communion and ordered archdiocese priests to deny her the sacrament should she request it.

After numerous attempts to speak with Speaker Pelosi to help her understand the grave evil she is perpetrating, the scandal she is causing, an the danger to her own soul she is risking, I have determined that she is not to be admitted to Holy Communion. https://t.co/l7M85CyG86

Speaker Pelosi calls herself a “devout Catholic” and “regular communicant,” telling C-Span that if she were ever denied communion, “that would be a severe blow to me.” She acknowledges conservative forces in the Church would like throw her out over her insistence that the U.S. government must not mandate reproductive decisions for women, but she insists she’s not going anywhere.

“Scandal” has a special meaning in Catholicism. It’s a “sin,” a statement or act that “leads people to move away from Jesus Christ and the salvation he offers us.” Scandal in its most straightforward Catholic sense might consist of a Catholic leader claiming Church teachings are wrong. In a more nuanced sense, scandal could be a truthful statement that lead people away from the Church.

If anyone is guilty of the sin of scandal here, the archbishop is. Nancy Pelosi IS a faithful Catholic. She hasn’t had an abortion. She doesn’t encourage women to have abortions. But as the elected representative of U.S. citizens from all over the San Francisco area, she says criminalizing abortion must be off the table. She has to represent all her constituents, not just the Catholic ones. She refuses to impose her religion on people who practice other religions or no religion.

Cordileone teaches that all of those are grave moral evils, and he’s tried to enforce them for San Francisco Catholics and non-Catholics alike.

In 2015, he forced staff at Bay Areas Catholic schools and charitable agencies to sign employment contracts agreeing to refrain from all the above (plus much more) and publicly affirm they are “grave moral evils,” or face dismissal.

Even if they aren’t Catholic.

Hundreds of prominent Bay Area Catholic leaders responded, sending a letter (read the full text here) begging Pope Francis to replace Cordileone with someone who would not cause scandal to the Church. Francis did not respond. Cordileone then mounted a massive witch hunt against LGBTQ Catholic employes — from teachers, to counselors, to social workers, to clerical staff. He disingenuously claimed custodial workers are “religious ministers” exempt from protection from California’s employment equality laws.

Many Catholic lay people resigned from Catholic agencies. Some said they would leave the Church for greener religious pastures where they were free to exercise their personal moral consciences. Many have questioned why Cordileone focuses so hard on rooting out gay/trans staff or staff who support gay/trans equality. He hasn’t mounted a witch hunt, after all, against Catholic staff who limit family size. He’s not grilled couples about their private bedroom practices. Divorced staff haven’t been fired. It’s curious, say San Francisco Catholics, that only LGBTQ people seem to be in Cordileone’s crosshairs.

Speaking of scandal, the archbishop continues scandalizing Bay Area Catholics by refusing to release a list of hundreds of archdiocese priests credibly accused of child sexual abuse, something the vast majority of U.S. bishops have already done. He’s even defying California law to keep the list from Catholic parents who insist they have a right to know.

Scandal? Well, pews are emptying out fast and the drop is sharper every year. Donations are down precipitously. I’d call that the result of scandal, wouldn’t you?

Whether Nancy Pelosi remains a member in good standing of the Catholic Church is an important question for many Catholics, but a larger issue presents itself. Can U.S. Catholics meaningfully serve as government leaders if Church patriarchs try to dictate positions on issues that impact the nation as a whole?

This tweeted comment to Cordileone sums things up very well: “Speaker Pelosi follows her religion. You are punishing her because she does not believe in forcing her religion on others. As a public servant she took an oath to the Constitution, not the Church. You are not our government, but you are the reason people will leave your Church.”

If the archbishop wishes to teach women that abortion is a grave moral evil, then he should do that. He should write books, he should speak in public, he should persuade and convince. He should encourage or even require other priests in his archdiocese to do the same. He should focus on being a faith leader.

But when he steps into politics, when he tries to twist a politician’s arm with religious discipline, he crosses a red line. The United States does not and must not tolerate religious leaders forcing their beliefs on people who don’t share them. The Roman Catholic Church has a terrible track record of doing exactly that, and the American people must not stand for it.

A year ago, the National Catholic Reporter revealed that “The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has hit a stomach-churning new low,” in lobbying to stop Congress’s bipartisan national suicide hotline. The bishops (a majority of all U.S. Catholic bishops) worked behind the scenes to torpedo the law because they opposed the hotline providing services specifically to LGBTQ people.

The bishops were apparently blinded by dogma, rejecting love and compassion in favor of a convoluted theology of refusing to label LGBTQ people as LGBTQ people.

I have no idea why the bishops believed the national suicide hotline was any of their business. It doesn’t impact the Church, and they have no possible interest in how it operates. But they made it their business like Cordileone is making civil abortion law his business.

Can you raise your voice demanding that he stay in his lane? That he stop trying to force Catholic beliefs and practices on people who don’t share them? That he stop trying to dictate to democratically elected leaders?

Better yet, can you join me asking Pope Francis, once again, to replace Archbishop Salvatore Joseph Cordileone? Faithful Catholics have been asking for years, and the time has come.

Here’s how to communicate your message to the pope:

Email the Office of the Apostolic Nuncio to the United States, Archbishop Christophe Pierre at [email protected]  or phone his office at 202–333–7121.

James Finn is a columnist for the LA Blade, a former Air Force intelligence analyst, an alumnus of Queer Nation and Act Up NY, and an “agented” but unpublished novelist. Send questions, comments, and story ideas to [email protected]

The preceding article was previously published by Prism & Pen– Amplifying LGBTQ voices through the art of storytelling and is republished by permission.

Christian nationalism has already made racism and xenophobia respectable again. White Christian nationalism promises more division

By James Finn | DETROIT – Know what delights me about trans and gay young people these days? They no longer presume they must uproot themselves from family and community to thrive and find love. They can be happy where they are…..

I wrote the above paragraph six years ago. I broke into online writing with a viral essay on another platform titled, “Have You Seen My Yellow Brick Road?” I described my journey from closeted teenager to happy middle-aged gay man, remembering fleeing my suburban Iowa home in search of “Oz,” a metaphor for love and acceptance, only to find that while I wasn’t looking, Oz had come to me.

“Please,” I wrote in conclusion, “if anyone finds a pair of ruby slippers, burn them!

Somebody asked me a question on an LGBTQ Facebook group yesterday: “Where do you see the struggle for queer equality going in the next decade?” I hated what my answer had to be, because it means the borders of Oz are retreating.

“We’re going to have to focus” I wrote, “on building strong communities in cities and states where Democrats are in charge, and we’re going to have to reach out to our queer siblings in red states. We’re going to have to make space for them to join us, and we’re going to have to work to get life-saving/sustaining services to queer people, especially kids, stuck where they are.”

What I meant is, we’re going to end up segregated again.

Maybe that won’t mean a return to the densely populated gayborhoods we used to rely on — that had been emptying out as we perceived less need for them — but we’re already witnessing the beginnings of what could turn into a great migration. In my own circles of queer friends, people are already leaving southern/heartland/red states… or they’re talking about it seriously. Prism & Pen writer Logan Silkwood is selling his house and moving 1,719 miles in search of his and his wife’s personal Oz.

Not a day goes by that I don’t see social media posts from queer people in Florida, Texas, Tennessee, Oklahoma, or Idaho searching for jobs or housing in blue states, or announcing they’re moving. And why not? According to Brody Levesque in the LA Blade yesterday, “child abuse” investigations of parents of trans kids in Texas are back on again after a court had struck them down. What parent is going to live with that fear? The U.S. Air Force is even cooperating by allowing families with trans children to transfer early out of Texas with no strikes against their service records.

Where I live in rural Michigan, trucks roar up and down highways every day with Confederate battle flags snapping in the wind.

LGBTQ people are leaving Florida even though Miami has a reputation as LGBTQ friendly. South Beach is actually on of our gayborhoods. Gay couples are speaking up about leaving or trying to leave because of a hostile state government with its Don’t Say Gay law, and with the probability things are going to get worse.

Yesterday, for example, The Washington Post featured a story about Nicolette Solomon, a young lesbian who just quit her job with the Miami-Dade County Public Schools. She says her marriage to her wife led to so much workplace suspicion and hostility that “it no longer felt possible to be lesbian and a teacher in Florida.”

And that’s in liberal Miami!

Will she move to a different state to seek the happiness and fulfillment she used to find in teaching? She doesn’t know yet.

Solomon is one of several queer teachers who have already resigned in Florida, citing the recently passed Don’t Say Gay law. Several of them are actively seeking jobs in blue states.

Yesterday, The Advocate featured a story about an elite private school in “purple” Maryland that denied admission to 11-year-old Brayden Stratton. Megan Stratton and Jennifer Dane applied to the non-denominational Christian school because their son has friends there and because the school has an excellent academic reputation. They wanted him to have a head start in life, but the school turned him down because his moms are engaged to be married.

Would you stay in a community that rejected you? I think that’s an important question, because this family is the tip of a growing iceberg. Ever since same-sex marriage became legal, certain institutions, usually conservative Christian ones, have used it to reject LGBTQ people, and the problem is getting worse. I don’t know what Megan and Jennifer are planning, but I imagine they’ve at least thought about what it would be like to live where they aren’t strangers in a strange land — where their high-achieving kid would be welcome or even recruited to an elite school his friends attend.

Supreme Court watcher and legal analyst Mark Joseph Stern wrote an important article in Slate yesterday, detailing how the the fight for women’s reproductive freedom is moving to the state level. He says legislatures in blue states, after years of relative inaction, have snapped into focus passing laws to make abortion easier to access and pay for:

This is the irony of our current moment: The most immediate impact of the Supreme Court’s imminent assault on abortion rights has been … an expansion of abortion rights.

But he warns that comes at the cost of a greater national divide. Authorities in red states are already (as in Oklahoma) gearing up to outlaw abortion from as early as “the moment of conception” and seeking to impose punitive legal consequences on women who leave the state for an abortion.

Faced with that, will some women in Oklahoma and similar states decide to move? Certainly not every woman will have that economic freedom, just like not all LGBTQ people can afford to leave red states, but some undoubtedly will. I think the only real question is: How significant will the exodus be?

The same White Christian nationalism driving anti-LGBTQ persecution and the war on women’s reproductive freedom drives racism. “Replacement Theory” nonsense, regularly featured on Fox News and extremist corners of the Internet like 4chan, used to be fringe. But as Fabiola Cineas explored in Vox on Wednesday, “replacement theory” has gone mainstream in the Republican Party. White Christian nationalists are panicking over a dearth of “white babies,” and unapologetic racism is back in fashion.

Where I live in rural Michigan, trucks roar up and down highways every day with Confederate battle flags snapping in the wind. We share a border with Canada. I can only get grits from Amazon. Nobody thinks those flags stand for Southern heritage.

We all know they mean racism. We know they mean Christian nationalist militias, Proud Boys and insurrection, increasing national division. Most of my neighbors excuse or defend that.

I haven’t seen a person of color in weeks. Black people don’t live up here in western Michigan villages. I’d have to drive more than an hour to Grand Rapids to find Black families and Black-owned businesses, and even then, only in certain neighborhoods.

In New York last week, “Replacement Theory” led to mass murder — a young white man motivated by racist hatred entered a supermarket full of Black people and shot as many to death as he could.

That’s the kind of division I’m talking about.

The United States may have ended legally enforced segregation, but voluntary segregation never went away. That New York shooter? He left his predominantly white community to kill Black people in a majority Black neighborhood.

When Black people, queer people, immigrants, and women end up divided from important parts of the nation, living apart from conservatives, Christian nationalists, or racists, it’s not because we want to or choose collectively to do so.

Individual human beings like Nicolette Solomon, Megan Stratton, and Logan Silkwood make rational, practical decisions. They don’t have the luxury to base life choices on strategy or activism. They have to do the best they can for themselves and their families.

If Congress had ever managed to pass the LGBTQ Equality Act, the Don’t Say Gay laws burning through red states would be unenforceable. Texas wouldn’t be permitted to hound parents of trans kids as “child abusers.” If the Supreme Court weren’t about to strike down Roe and thereby deny basic human rights to women, women wouldn’t be making hard choices about where to live. If the Supreme Court hadn’t eviscerated voter protection for Black people, political power would be more evenly distributed.

The Right in the United States is now largely the Christian Nationalist Right, up to the very highest levels of Republican leadership, even though they don’t and can’t have a majority of the American people on their side.

What that means in the short term is conflict, physical separation, and increasing political division.

It means all of us are going to need to figure out where our personal Oz is, and which road leads to it.

The United States of America are less united than they’ve been in a long time, and a lack of commitment to liberty and human rights explains a lot. Where do we go from here?

Can the Democratic Party take decisive control of Congress in November? Can the radically conservative Supreme Court be reformed and brought back into step with the majority of Americans? Can liberty and human rights enter the public stage as important values?

Yes, if we all work hard to make it happen! Yes, if we surge to the polls in November!

James Finn is a columnist for the LA Blade, a former Air Force intelligence analyst, an alumnus of Queer Nation and Act Up NY, and an “agented” but unpublished novelist. Send questions, comments, and story ideas to [email protected]

The preceding article was previously published by Prism & Pen– Amplifying LGBTQ voices through the art of storytelling and is republished by permission.

Texas Trans girl assaulted over GOP lies about Uvalde shooting

Texas victims in single classroom, GOP lawmaker said gunman was Trans

BREAKING: 19 killed in Texas Elementary School shooting

After anti-LGBTQ+ presentation, school district takes aim at free speech

Assembly passes bill protects patients & providers from anti-choice states

Ellen signs off after 19 seasons

Trans Inclusive Health Care Act passes California State Senate

Senator Wiener’s No Tax Exemption for Insurrection Act, passes Senate

© Copyright Los Angeles Blade, LLC. 2021. All rights reserved | Powered by Keynetik.