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 đŸłď¸â€đŸŒˆ LGBTQ Community, Discussion regarding LGBTQ

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TSinternaldisputes
post Sep 28 2020, 09:38 AM

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QUOTE(sls0101 @ Sep 27 2020, 11:49 PM)
Has anyone seen a recent survey that a news article did on Malaysians' view on freedom of gender identity? The results were pretty depressing but unsurprising.

Also I like this topic a lot. I've been struggling with my sexual orientation/identity in general cuz I was raised in a conservative religious family and now I'm just confused with myself in general
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Hey there! icon_rolleyes.gif

Not really sure which survey you are referring to, but in general majority of Malaysians are not very open-minded when it comes to LGBT. If we are looking at trends however, some people especially millenials are starting to see that there is nothing wrong with us.

So while the situation is dire, there is still a glimmer of hope out there.
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post Sep 28 2020, 12:58 PM

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post Sep 29 2020, 09:12 AM

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QUOTE(cwv @ Sep 28 2020, 06:25 PM)
I'm working in Taiwan now. I know they accept it here but I am still Malaysian and my parents are still in Malaysia. However even though officially the country accept, but society is still biased. Especially the corporates. At my high position the expectation is still to have "normal" family. I guess to please my family and bosses I should simply tolerate being married to a girl just for the sake of complying.
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Oh, I didn't know that Taiwanese corporate culture still cannot accept LGBT. That's really a shame. sad.gif

I understand where you are coming from. It's a tricky subject—every gay person is struggling with acceptance from their family, friends and society including myself. I wish you all the best! About your plan to marry a girl someday, I hope you will not make any rash decisions because you're possibly trapping an innocent person in your personal dilemma if you do so.
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post Sep 29 2020, 10:12 AM

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Yet another airline ditches the exclusionary phrase ‘ladies and gentlemen’ in favour of gender-neutral greetings
Source: https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2020/09/28/japan...travel-flights/

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Japan Airlines will stop using the the phrase “ladies and gentlemen” in during in-flight and airport announcements to be more inclusive of trans and non-binary people.

From 1 October, JAL “will abolish expressions that based on (two types of) sex and use gender-friendly expressions” like “good morning” and “good evening”, a spokesperson for the airline told AFP.

Although the expressions used by the airline are already gender-neutral in Japanese, the mandate will apply to announcements made in other languages.

Japan Airlines is the first Japanese airline to adopt this more inclusive approach, and it seems others could follow suit after a spokesperson for rival ANA Holdings told AFP they would “study the issue based on comments from our customers”.

The move follows JAL’s trial “LGBT Ally Charter” flight for same-sex partners and their families, which led the airline changing to its rules to extend spouse and family allowances to same-sex partners.

Other international airlines have already moved to make their language more LGBT-inclusive. Australia’s Qantas was among the first when it launched a “Spirit of Inclusion” initiative in March 2018.

The carrier asked employees to refrain from gender-specific words like “honey”, “love and “guys”, while the terms “partner”, “spouse” and “parents” were preferred above the more exclusionary “husband and wife” and “mum and dad”.

Air Canada similarly asked its staff to stop using “ladies and gentlemen” or “mesdames et messieurs” in October last year, opting for the more inclusive “hello everybody” or “tout le monde”.

The following year several major US airlines including Delta, JetBlue, United and American Airlines agreed to introduce a non-binary gender option on booking forms.

A spokesperson for United said: “As part of our commitment to inclusion, we want to ensure all of our customers feel comfortable and welcome no matter how they self-identify, which is why we will begin offering our customers the ability to select the gender with which they most closely identify during the booking process.”

Customers can now identify themselves as M(ale), F(emale), U(undisclosed) or X(unspecified), corresponding to what is indicated on their passports or ID.


Added on
While our local airlines are busy restructuring and monitoring how female cabin crews should dress, other global airlines are tackling issues of inclusivity for LGBT.
TSinternaldisputes
post Oct 1 2020, 04:14 PM

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QUOTE(DDG_Ross @ Oct 1 2020, 12:24 PM)
Timothy Ray Brown: World's first patient cured of HIV dies from cancer
Source: https://news.sky.com/story/timothy-ray-brow...cancer-12085957

Mr Brown's partner says he had made it his life's work to tell the story of his cure and "became an ambassador of hope".

Timothy Ray Brown, the first person known to be cured of HIV, has died from cancer.

"It is with great sadness that I announce that Timothy passed away... this afternoon surrounded by myself and friends, after a five month battle with leukaemia," his partner, Tim Hoeffgen, said in a post on Facebook.

Mr Brown, 54, became known as "the Berlin patient" after his HIV was cleared by treatment involving a bone marrow transplant in the German capital in 2007.

The American's case fascinated and inspired a generation of HIV doctors as well as patients infected with the virus, offering a glimmer of hope that one day a cure will be found that eventually ends the AIDS pandemic.

"We owe Timothy and his doctor, Gero Huetter, a great deal of gratitude for opening the door for scientists to explore the concept that a cure for HIV is possible," said Adeeba Kamarulzaman, president of the International AIDS Society.

Mr Brown was diagnosed in 1995 while living in Berlin, and in 2006 was also diagnosed with a type of blood cancer known as acute myeloid leukaemia.

While Mr Brown remained clear of HIV for more than a decade after being treated, he suffered a relapse of the leukaemia in the past year.

His doctors said the blood cancer had spread to his spine and brain, and he had recently been in hospice care in his home town of Palm Springs, California.

"I'm heartbroken that my hero is now gone. Tim was truly the sweetest person in the world," Mr Hoeffgen said.

For Dr Huetter, the German doctor caring for him in 2007, Mr Brown's case was a shot in the dark. The treatment involved the destruction of his immune system and the transplanting of stem cells with a gene mutation called CCR5, which resists HIV.

Only a tiny proportion of people - most of them of northern European descent - have the CCR5 mutation that makes them resistant to the AIDS-causing virus.

This and other factors made the treatment expensive, complex and highly risky. Most experts say it could never become a way to cure all patients, since many of them would risk death from the procedure itself.

More than 37 million people worldwide are currently infected with HIV, and the AIDS pandemic has killed about 35 million people since it began in the 1980s.

Medical advances over the past three decades have led to the development of drug combinations known as antiretroviral therapies that can keep the virus in check, allowing many people to live with the virus for years.

Adam Castillejo, who was known as "the London patient" until he revealed his identity this year, is thought to be in remission from HIV after having a transplant in 2016 similar to the one Mr Brown had.
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RIP. sad.gif
TSinternaldisputes
post Oct 6 2020, 12:52 PM

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#TetapNormal: I’m an Evil LGBT and I’m PROUD
Source: https://www.queerlapis.com/tetap-normal-evil-lgbts/

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I woke up feeling rather normal. I lay in bed for a while, then suddenly remembered I was LGBT and had an obligation to society to fulfil—doing evil things all day. I got so excited I jumped out of bed, startling my servant who had been waiting patiently in the shadows for me to wake up.

While sipping piping hot coffee extracted through child labour and prepared by my dutiful servant, I sent an email to several high-ranking officials about the millions I had just transferred into their offshore accounts.

Dear Sir/Madam,

Please enjoy the money from xxxxx Fund, courtesy of the hard-working pilgrims saving up for the hajj. Soon, we will go on our own pilgrimage… to the casinos of Monaco! On a yacht! Syukur.

Regards,
Faris


“Syukur” justifies every sen of rezeki.

After my morning massage, I stood on the balcony and spat on the small children in the playground below. They howled in protest, but little Fatimah, cheerfully wiping the spit from her eye, chirped, “When I grow up, I want to be a gay so I can be evil, just like Uncle Faris.” What a clever child!

I had a meeting to attend, so my servant dressed me in my finest. My 6-foot-5 chauffeur/bodyguard, George, met me in my gleaming tax-free Bentley.

“You look very evil today, Tan Sri Datuk Seri Faris,” he said, after his customary bow and ring kiss. Duh, don’t I look evil every day? I chose this LGBT life and I deserve every moment of evil.

We ran every red light and drove well above the speed limit. Fines are cheap and only for poor, normal people. While snorting cocaine in the backseat, I checked my Twitter feed. Who the hell are all these #TetapNormal people? Parading their normalness like it’s natural! This is definitely a Western ideology and it’s not our culture. Next thing you know they’ll be demanding things like not wanting to be killed. Silly people.

I threw the empty coke baggies out the window, even though there was a bin in the car. One little baggie hit a police officer who had been chasing us on a motorcycle. We stopped the car so I could hand over an angpow stuffed with cash. The police officer’s eyes lit up as he opened it, and he offered to escort us the rest of the way so we wouldn’t be bothered by ambulances and tolls. How kind!

George parked in the disabled spot as it was closest to the entrance and I told him to growl at anyone who looked at him or the car.

The meeting was very boring. Something about a logging project in an Orang Asli area blah blah blah. I don’t see what the fuss is about. God created nature for us to make money, and there’s plenty of jungle for everyone. Why don’t the Orang Asli just move to the next one? It’s not like they have a lot of things to pack. Everyone at the meeting was also very gay and we laughed evilly as we shook hands and signed papers.

After the formalities, we turned on the TV to watch the election announcements. Every person we handpicked had been elected to their respective posts, just as we had planned. So many gays! It will be even easier to do business from now on.

To celebrate our success, we hit the clubs. As we sipped on champagne, my friend told me about his latest wife, who is 10 years old. Before this, I had my doubts on whether or not he was evil enough to be gay, but marrying a child confirmed it. He proudly showed me pictures of her and his similarly-aged daughter, at their school’s sports day. Their team had won the gunny sack race. May God bless this happy family.

That night in bed, surrounded by beautiful sleeping trafficked sex workers, I reflected on what a wonderful life I have. As my servant retreated into the shadows for the night, I whispered to her, “We should be grateful for this wonderful life.” Syukur, indeed!

Since the above-mentioned events, Tan Sri Datuk Seri Faris has been appointed to the boards of several government-linked companies.


Added on
This is a parody article, btw. biggrin.gif
TSinternaldisputes
post Oct 6 2020, 01:01 PM

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Queer People Are Way More Likely to Suffer From Migraines
Source: https://www.thecut.com/article/lgb-people-m...-migraines.html

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As a nearsighted person with comically thick eyeglass lenses — and a full-time screen-looker to boot — I have long been prone to headaches, but I never had migraines until a couple of years ago. I knew something was different when my headache pulsed from one temple, making me nauseous and sensitive to light. My wife, a longtime migraine sufferer, identified the unpleasant experience right away. Yes, that’s right: I am gay, and I started getting migraines just a year or two after coming out. Coincidence???

According to a new study published by the Journal of the American Medical Association Neurology, lesbian, gay, and bisexual people experience migraines at a rate 58 percent higher than our heterosexual enemies, I mean friends. One in six adults overall experience migraine headaches in their lifetime, but among lesbian, gay, and bi people, that figure jumps to one in three, per the study. Dr. Jason Nagata, the study’s author and an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of California San Francisco, speculates that added stress and discrimination may be responsible.

“There might be a higher rate of migraines in LGB people because of discrimination, stigma, or prejudice, which may lead to stress and trigger a migraine,” Nagata told Reuters. “Physicians should be aware that migraines are quite common in LGB individuals and assess for migraine symptoms.” Another potential contributing factor may be the barriers to health care faced by LGB individuals, Nagata said.

If added stress and marginalization are at work here, one might fairly hypothesize that migraine rates should be particularly high in trans individuals and particularly Black trans people, nearly half of whom report being harassed at school and at work. Nagata’s study (which surveyed 10,000 Americans) does not establish causation, and while he presumes some trans individuals were included in such a large group of people, the study did not explicitly consider the link between gender identity and migraines. “Understanding migraine disparities across gender identity is an important area for future research,” he says.


Added on
Well that's explains my migraines these last few months. sweat.gif
TSinternaldisputes
post Oct 6 2020, 01:08 PM

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Taiwan to host LGBT+ Pride parade despite coronavirus pandemic
Source: https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2020/10/02/taiwa...ic-2020-taepei/

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As the coronavirus rages on elsewhere, Taiwan is set to go ahead with its LGBT+ Pride parade in what organisers believe will likely be the largest queer event held in 2020.

Now in its 18th year, the country’s Pride parade will see the streets of Taipei heave with the colours of the rainbow on 31 October.

Every last Saturday in October, the capital hosts the largest annual Pride parade in Asia. It normally welcomes an estimated 80,000 people each year, but organisers are expecting a lesser turnout due to the pandemic, according to Taiwan News.

While the coronavirus has made large gatherings unthinkable in many countries, Taiwan has almost remained impervious. The self-governing island has vastly contained its caseloads, enabling processions such as an LGBT+ Pride parade to go ahead with only minor restrictions.

As a result, organisers explained that they believe Taiwan LGBT+ Pride will likely be the largest queer gathering of any kind held this year after many Pride events were cancelled or digitalised.

But they nevertheless stressed for Pride-goers to maintain social distancing as well as wear face masks when in attendance.

The procession will set out from the Taipei City Hall Plaza in the afternoon. Participants can choose to take the “north” or “south” routes, which goes through Zhongxiao East Road and Xinyi Road, before returning to the original point.

The theme of the parade will be “Beauty, My Own Way”, organiser Fletcher Hong said.

Hong said that people should “understand and respect each individual’s own identity”, speaking of how society should not force standards of beauty onto others.

Taiwan’s national Pride parade comes after the country threw a Pride parade in June on behalf of the countless countries unable to hold their own due to the coronavirus crisis.

LGBT+ rights activist and honorary chairman of the Taiwan Gay Sports and Development Association, Chyi Jia-Wei told CNA at the time: “I’m marching for New York because that’s the origin of the Stonewall uprising.

“I attended the parade there last year, but this year it has been cancelled.

“As June is pride month for the international LGBT+ community and so many cities cannot hold events, the parade in Taiwan is especially meaningful because it signifies our solidarity.”


Added on
Taiwan is a beacon of hope in this volatile region.
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post Oct 7 2020, 09:26 AM

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Federal Court rejects man’s bid to stay anonymous while challenging Selangor Shariah law on unnatural sex
Source: https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/202...elangor/1910104

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PUTRAJAYA, Oct 6 — The Federal Court today dismissed a Malaysian man’s bid to remain anonymous and not be named in public reports of his constitutional challenge in court over a Selangor state law that makes it a Shariah offence to have unnatural sex.

Chief Judge of Sabah and Sarawak Datuk Abang Iskandar Abang Hashim said that he found that there was no cogent reason presented to him to justify the application to keep the man’s identity confidential.

The judge also noted that almost all the news reports by the media on this case previously had withheld the man’s identity.

“So on the balance, I will not invoke my jurisdiction to allow this enclosure. It is therefore dismissed with costs of RM1,000 to each respondent — Selangor and Mais. No costs awarded to Maiwp,” he said when delivering his decision.

Today was the Federal Court’s hearing of the man’s application for his name, address, photograph, video or any details that could lead to his identification to not be published and for him to be referred to as “ABC”.

Lawyer Surendra Ananth, who represented the 35-year-old man, had earlier argued that the Federal Court has inherent jurisdiction to give an order to keep his client’s name anonymous.

Surendra highlighted the risk of infringement of his client’s private life if his identity was to be publicly disclosed, pointing out that the right to privacy has been legally recognised in Malaysia.

Surendra highlighted that two of the applicants in a previous case to challenge a Negri Sembilan state law that criminalised cross-dressing had filed affidavits to support his client’s application for anonymity, and that they had shared with the Federal Court their experience of being heavily harassed.

He noted that two of the applicants in the Negri Sembilan case had faced a lot of harassment after their names were published in news reports on their case, with one of them shunned by the family and who had to resort to moving to different states due to the daily harassment faced, and with this individual also losing employment and subsequently suffering from mental health issues and needing medical help due to the harassment.

“All this harassment only started once their identities were published,” he said.

While noting that the main objection by other parties to this case was that his client has yet to face harassment, Surendra said this underlined the necessity for the anonymity order for preventive purposes: “My test is, is there a risk? If I wait for harassment, then it defeats the purpose for me to apply. I’m applying to prevent harassment.

“I think there’s sufficient material to grant this order, and my learned friends have not been able to point to any prejudice that would be suffered if My Lord grants this order,” Surendra said, highlighting that the media’s withholding of his client’s name indicates that the media themselves recognised there is no need to report his name.

Siti Fatimah Talib, the Selangor state assistant legal adviser representing the Selangor government, then voiced her objection to the request for anonymity, arguing that the man had not shown that he was threatened and that there were no special circumstances to justify his name being withheld.

She also argued that he was not a minor or a child that needs special protection, but was an adult.

Siti Fatimah also argued that the man should have filed the application for anonymity from the start when he had filed his court challenge, instead of only asking for anonymity at this point which she said appears to be an “afterthought”.

Lawyer Halimatunsa’diah Abu Ahmad, who represented the Selangor Islamic Religious Council (Mais) who is intervening in this case, meanwhile argued that court orders to withhold identity are usually granted when it involves the protection of children and highlighted that this man is not a child.

She also argued that this man does not fall under the categories listed in Section 15 of the Courts of Judicature Act, which provides that the court may order that the name, address, photograph of a court witness and other details that may lead to the identification of the witness to not be published.

She also said that the man should rely on Article 8 of the Federal Constitution for equal protection of the law if he were to face threats as a result of this court challenge, and questioned why he was seeking to have different treatment from others by asking for his identity to be anonymous.

“And if at all the petitioner is being affected or pressured by any other party, he should be protected under Article 8 — equality applicable to all Malaysians — then he can always report to authorities and have protection just like any other person, just like us. And all the affidavits have not shown any evidence or proof of him being threatened or about to be threatened,” she said, further noting that two online postings cited by the man did not name him and that this man had only said he may face risk or be threatened.

Lawyer Abdul Rahim Sinwan, who represented the Federal Territories Islamic Religious Council (Maiwp) as amicus curiae, meanwhile argued that it was only an assumption of danger to the man or that his safety would be under threat and that it was not a real issue.

In responding to all these arguments, Surendra said that they had all failed to show or indicate how publishing the man’s name would be critical or important for the public or for public interest, pointing out that this challenge is based purely on legal issues instead of facts.

“In criminal trials, I accept the name and identity of the person is important because it goes into facts, but here we are not concerned with the facts. I ask Your Lordship to consider that his name is not important for publication,” he said, further highlighting that his client was only asking for his name to not be published and not asking for other parts of the proceedings to not be published.

While acknowledging that it is difficult to quantify what harassment is and what would happen in the future, Surendra said the court will have to weigh the risk, noting that Selangor and Mais which objected to the anonymity order had not shown why it was important to publicise his client’s name and that his client on the other hand faces risk of harassment and does not need to wait for harassment to happen first.

“As to the point when we should have filed this, at the outset, when we first filed the writ, we didn’t go to the press. It was only once the case was taken up by the press and statements made by public figures, then our client felt the need for a protection order. So I don’t think it can be held against us for not filing from the start,” he said.

Surendra also highlighted that the Federal Court had previously recognised that it has the powers to issue a gag order on an entire trial in the case of Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s SRC International Sdn Bhd case, noting that he was only seeking for a much milder version to withhold his client’s name. The Federal Court had previously rejected Najib’s bid to impose a gag order on his SRC trial.

When met outside the courtroom, Surendra said that the judge formed the view that on balance there is no risk of harassment, based on evidence that was produced before the court.

“Because most of the media did not report the petitioner’s name, I think that was a factor the judge considered to say there is no risk of harassment, so there is insufficient material before him to form the view that there is risk of harassment,” he explained to reporters.

S. Thilaga, founder of human rights group Justice For Sisters which is monitoring the case and supporting the applicant in this case, pointed out the problems that could arise if the man’s identity is published.

“Because our concern is if the name is out, one can be vulnerable to online doxxing for non-consensual disclosure of information, other online threats and even termination of jobs,” she told reporters here.

“We thank the media for practising such high standards of ethics and in protecting the person’s privacy and we hope that this will continue.

“We hope the media will continue not to publish the name, the media has already practised high standards of privacy, and anonymised the name from the beginning so I think it’s okay to continue that, because the practice by the media led to the lack of harassment. So I think that should be continued in the interest of the privacy and wellbeing of the petitioner,” she added.

Earlier today, the judge allowed Mais’ application to be an intervener as he found that it has a direct interest in the case.

The judge today however disallowed Maiwp’s application to be an intervener as he found that it did not have a direct interest in the case, but allowed it to be an amicus curiae.

The Federal Court today also fixed December 14 for the hearing of the man’s court challenge.

His court challenge is specifically on whether the Selangor state legislative assembly has the powers to enact the Selangor state law — that makes it a crime to have unnatural sex — in the first place.

Under Section 28 of the Shariah Criminal Offences (Selangor) Enactment 1995, it is an offence for any person to perform “sexual intercourse against the order of nature” with any man, woman or animal, which is punishable by a maximum RM5,000 fine or maximum three-year jail term or maximum six strokes of whipping, or any combination of the penalties.


Added on
It's unfortunate that the application for gag order was rejected by the court. The media can now publish the name of the man challenging the Syariah Law but due to ethics and request from the lawyer, they're not gonna do it. So proud of the local media.
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post Oct 7 2020, 09:28 AM

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While the government is busy promoting conversion therapies under the disguise of religion, some private entities are promoting the opposite kind of therapy.
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post Oct 7 2020, 11:24 AM

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'I don't want to lie': Openly gay candidate stands in Myanmar election
Source: https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2020/10/0...anmar-election/

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YANGON, MYANMAR – Outraged over ongoing discrimination in Myanmar, Myo Min Tun decided to stand as the first openly gay election candidate in a country where same-sex relations are illegal.

His decision to enter the political fray came after transgender friends told him how they had suffered police harassment.

The officers allegedly forced them to remove their bras and kneel in humiliating positions before touching them inappropriately, Myo Min Tun said.

“This was a violation of their rights,” he said. “And I realized there’s no one in parliament to talk about this.”

So he decided to run for a seat in the regional assembly in his home city of Mandalay.

“I’m doing this to be a pioneer for all LGBT people so they know we can be anyone we want.”

From florist and noodle soup chef to HIV prevention worker, the 39-year-old says he has been lucky not to suffer discrimination in his varied career in Myanmar’s second city.

But a British colonial era law means same-sex relations are still illegal — even if space is opening up for the LGBT community in the conservative country.

Yangon’s Pride party in February attracted more than 10,000 people, with many painting their little fingers pink to campaign to decriminalize same-sex relations ahead of November’s election.

But Myo Min Tun thinks it is too soon to fight that battle.

Instead, he vows to tackle the daily acts of discrimination the community faces, an issue thrust into the spotlight with the prominent suicide of a gay man last year.

Workplace bullying was widely blamed after the man’s final Facebook post displayed mocking comments and photos from colleagues.

An official probe concluded, however, the employer was not responsible, saying the man had simply been “mentally weak.”

“We still have a long way to go,” Myo Min Tun said, sighing.

Myo Min Tun knew he was gay when he fell in love with a fellow student while in ninth grade.

His father disapproved until his death although he “never physically beat” him.

“But I think my mother loved me even more for it,” he said with a smile, adding that neighbors and family friends even encouraged him to stand in the election.

“I have always been actively involved in my community, so they recognize me for who I am.”

Aung San Suu Kyi’s ruling National League for Democracy (NLD) is widely expected to be returned to power in the Nov. 8 national and regional vote.

The NLD’s manifesto states it stands against discrimination based on sexual orientation but has done nothing to address the issue in its first term, say rights groups.

Myo Min Tun instead chose to run for the People’s Pioneer Party because of its “anti-discriminatory stance and because they favor young people.”

But leader Thet Thet Khine, who set up the party last year after being kicked out of the NLD, told AFP it was “not the time” to try to decriminalize same-sex relations, even if she admitted this was a basic human right.

“People will not care. There could even be a lot of backlash if we advocate for this.”

Myo Min Tun admits he did not mention he was gay in his interview with the party — but says it was important for him to come out publicly.

“I didn’t want to lie to get votes,” he said.

“I believe if I’m fair and truthful, people will support me.”


Added on

Such a brave man! Wonder if we gonna have an openly-gay/lesbian candidate in our election soon.
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post Oct 8 2020, 01:27 PM

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This Gay Dad Is Not Here For Your Homophobic Assumptions About His Family
Source: https://www.them.us/story/gay-dad-tiktok-homphobia-response

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Not all heroes wear capes, and José Rolón is no exception. The viral dadfluencer, known simply as @nycgaydad on Instagram, has been delighting followers during quarantine with hilarious videos featuring his three children: Avery, Lilah, and London. A successful New York event planner and single gay dad, Rolón’s posts have been especially endearing lately, featuring pictures of his family in color-coordinated masks and videos of disagreements with his daughter about who has the right to color rainbows in the house.

On social media, Rolón likes to keep it light. However, when a commenter recently asked a tone-deaf question about his son’s sexual orientation on TikTok, things got serious. “Not trying to be offensive or anything, just an actual question but do gay dads want their sons to like girls or like guys?” asked commenter @fabz_1295 on one of Rolón’s posts last Tuesday.

Rather than dignifying the question with a response, Rolón and Avery faced the camera with a look that could take down an entire RuPaul’s Drag Race panel. Rolón then asked his son a few questions. First up: “Who’s your favorite queen?” he inquired.

“That’s easy,” Avery responded. “Beyoncé.”

Avery went on to prove that he had aced his queer education. His favorite milk? Harvey, of course! He even knows how to say “yes” in gay: Yaaaassss kween.

The short clip has garnered 45,000 likes and nearly a thousand comments, with many commenters simply weighing in to discuss their favorite diva (Janet, Whitney, or Mariah?) and to applaud Rolón for his parenting skills. “He said Bey? I stan,” wrote one commenter, “TASTE. Nicki would have sufficed too but”

Not all responses were as lighthearted, however. Some lamented that people are so close-minded in 2020. “Although this question provides a teachable moment,” wrote one user, “it is still sad that people are asking this question in this day and age.”

The latter commenter hits on a paradox: Despite a rise in same-sex adoptions and non-traditional parenting configurations, stigma against LGBTQ+ parents is still alive and well, especially when it comes to single gay fathers. Just this week, news broke that a sperm donor in the U.K. was awarded damages after his sample was used to help 11 families conceive children, some of whom were same-sex families.

Even in this country, many regressive laws banning same-sex adoption — such as those in Florida and Texas — have only been overturned in the last decade. In Texas and several other conservative states, there are still legal loopholes that privilege religious beliefs over the rights of LGBTQ+ parents.

Perhaps without knowing it, Rolón hit on a humorous way of spreading awareness about queer parenthood in a moment where the rights of those parents could easily be threatened. With the potential confirmation of conservative Amy Coney Barrett judge to the Supreme Court, the rights of same-sex parents are on shaky ground. SCOTUS will soon decide whether Catholic adoption groups have the right to turn away same-sex couples, and Barrett — who is against same-sex marriage — could be a critical vote in that case.

Whatever happens at the Supreme Court, one thing is certain: Avery Rolón’s queer education is something we can all feel good about.
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post Oct 8 2020, 02:41 PM

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QUOTE(internaldisputes @ Oct 8 2020, 02:39 PM)
More people die of dengue than Covid-19, Kedah MB tells critics

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Kedah Menteri Besar Muhammad Sanusi Mohd Nor said the state government should not be blamed for the surge of Covid-19 cases in the state because it was not something it could anticipate.

This came as Kedah recorded 153 cases today, mostly in the Alor Setar Prison.

“People are saying we in Kedah don’t know how to do our jobs. But what can we do? This was already coming our way. It wasn’t like we can see this virus. We did not commit any sin. This is a pandemic. “More people die of dengue, malaria, H1N1, cholera, tuberculosis and many other diseases which have no vaccines. Eventually, we will have to accept that Covid-19 is among us and not instil an excessive stigma around it,” he told reporters at Wisma Darul Aman in Alor Setar today.

Speaking after an exco meeting, he said, Covid-19 patients were being wrongly treated as “sinners” even though they did nothing wrong in contracting the virus. He added HIV/Aids patients, too, had been accepted even though some were infected after committing “sinful acts”, unlike as with Covid-19.

“The public now views those who are Covid-19 positive as sinful and worthy of condemnation, including the de facto religious affair minister. But they didn’t commit any sin. No one asked to be infected with Covid-19. They were infected while performing their duties. “This isn’t HIV/Aids where the virus spreads through same-sex sexual intercourse which is forbidden and sinful (in Islam) or through injecting drugs, which is wrong by law and harmful to health. “Yet after some time, HIV/Aids patients, too, have organisations which support them and have campaigns like the 'Red Ribbon' to promote acceptance as if they did nothing wrong,” [/B]he said.

HIV/Aids is transmitted through unprotected sex with someone infected (regardless of sexual orientation or gender), sharing drug equipment such as hypodermic needles with an infected person and from mother to child during pregnancy, birth or breastfeeding.

Read full article @ https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/545643
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Whataboutism at its best. shakehead.gif
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post Oct 9 2020, 10:06 AM

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Japanese politician faces backlash for claiming LGBT education 'would mean no more children'
Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/as...ty-b883537.html

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A member of Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party, Masateru Shiraishi, is facing a severe online backlash after commenting that his ward would cease to exist if LGBT+ rights were protected by law.

Shiraishi, who was called a dinosaur on social media for his comments, has so far not refuted or retracted his statement despite objections from his own party. "This is impossible, but if all Japanese women were lesbian or all Japanese men were gay, then do you think the next generation of people will be born?" Mr Shiraishi said at a 25 September assembly session[ of Tokyo's Adachi Ward, The Japan Times reported.

The low fertility rate is a significant problem in Japan. It is an issue that remains prevalent even as the Japanese government has taken measures to overcome it over the last few decades. In 2019, the Asian country recorded a total fertility rate of 1.36, with just over 865,000 babies born – a record low.

But Takeru Shimodaira, a member of Japan Alliance for LGBT Legislation, which is demanding a law to ban discrimination, asked Mr Shiraishi to correct his remark, noting that it was “based on discrimination and prejudice, as LGBT people are not responsible for Japan's decreasing birthrate".

This is not the first time that Japanese politicians have faced a backlash over such comments. In 2018, another leader, Mio Sugita, faced criticism for opposing the government’s support for same-sex couples.

The backlash against Mr Shiraishi reflects the polarising issue of LGBT+ rights in Japan. The country still does not legally recognise same-sex marriage, although campaigning by the LGBT+ community and its allies has led to progressive measures including the availability of so-called “partnership certificates” in many municipalities.

A global acceptance index of the LGBT+ community released in 2019 noted that globally Japan is among the countries such as Brazil, Canada, Great Britain, and the United States where acceptance of LGBT+ people and their rights has increased. However, it had revealed that even as Japan witnessed an increase in acceptance, it has had a “slower rate of change, and it seems that, in 2017, acceptance levels were slightly lower than in 2016 and 2015”.

Preparations for the Tokyo Olympics, which were postponed to 2021 due to the Covid-19 pandemic, had brought LGBT+ issues into the limelight as Tokyo passed an ordinance to protect LGBT+ visitors from potential abuse.

Although there has been a consistent pressure on Japan’s government to pass better laws to protect the LGBT+ community, it has thus far resisted. In April, earlier this year, about 100 human rights and LGBT+ organisations wrote to then-prime minister Shinzo Abe demanding such a law be instated.


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I guess it's easier to blame LGBT instead of fixing the obvious work-life imbalance in Japan that prohibits child-bearing. sweat.gif
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post Oct 9 2020, 01:10 PM

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post Oct 12 2020, 09:56 AM

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Coming of age story about a boy who dreams to become a drag queen. wub.gif
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post Oct 14 2020, 11:57 AM

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QUOTE(internaldisputes @ Oct 9 2020, 10:06 AM)
Japanese politician faces backlash for claiming LGBT education 'would mean no more children'
Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/as...ty-b883537.html

» Click to show Spoiler - click again to hide... «

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Tokyo ward assemblyman to apologize over remarks against LGBT rights
Source: https://english.kyodonews.net/news/2020/10/...gbt-rights.html

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A local politician of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party plans to make a formal apology and retract his remarks that disrespected the rights of sexual minorities, at a session of the Adachi Ward Assembly in Tokyo next week, the assembly's chairman said Monday.

Masateru Shiraishi, 78, who has faced public backlash for his claims last month that blamed sexual minorities for Japan's falling number of births, will make an about-face on his stance after the top assemblyman of Adachi Ward urged him to apologize and rescind his comments publicly.

"I sincerely apologize again to those who were hurt by Shiraishi's remarks with regard to LGBT," Akira Shikahama, the assembly's chairman who is also a member of the LDP, said in a statement posted online.

Shikahama said Shiraishi has offered to apologize and retract his remarks at an assembly session scheduled for Oct. 20.

Shiraishi, an 11-term assembly member, has come under fire for claiming at an assembly session on Sept. 25 that the ward would "cease to exist" if the rights of sexual minorities are protected by law.

The comments came amid more than 50 municipalities across the country including Tokyo's Shibuya Ward issuing "partnership certificates" to LGBT couples as same-sex marriage is not legally recognized in Japan.

Since then, Shiraishi has appeared on several TV shows and told reporters he did not intend to discriminate against sexual minorities, and that he would not apologize or retract his remarks.

As of Monday, an initiative calling for Shiraishi's resignation on the online petition platform Change.org had received over 2,500 signatures.


Added on
Kudos to him for admitting he is wrong and apologizing.
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post Oct 14 2020, 12:02 PM

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Mauritius defiantly celebrates Pride with a kaleidoscopic march and calls for an end to its colonial-era gay sex ban
Source: https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2020/10/12/mauri...an-section-250/

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Mauritius hosted a rare, kaleidoscopic LGBT+ Pride parade amid the COVID-19 pandemic, calling on lawmakers to decriminalise same-sex relations.

The LGBT+ Pride event, which took place on Saturday (October 10), was organised by the Collectif Arc-en-Cieland.

It saw more than 500 people march the streets in hopes of being heard, recognised and seen. Mauritius is considered COVID-free thanks to stringent measures imposed earlier on in the year, but attendees were encouraged to wear masks.

The theme of the Pride march was “Eski to tann mwa?”, translating to the powerful message: “Do you hear me?”.

Organisers and Pride-goers protested Section 250 of the penal code, which criminalises same-sex relations.

Under the colonial-era law, men who are found to have had sex with other men can be imprisoned for up to five years. There is no ban on same-sex relations between women.

Director of Collectif Arc-en-Ciel (CAEC) Anjeelee Kaur Beegun said: “We have been advocating for equal rights for LGBT [people] for 15 years.

“We have had significant victories such as the Equal Opportunities Act and the Worker’s Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation, but true equality is still our goal.”

Beegun also commented on how the criminalisation of same-sex activity is “used to stigmatise and threaten LGBT+ people”. She also noted the lack of protections for transgender people, adding that homophobia and transphobia remain very common in Mauritius.

“We hope that through this march we are able to sensitise decision-makers and the population about the harsh realities of LGBT+ people and compel them to be more empathetic,” Beegun said.

The London-based organisation, the Peter Tatchell Foundation, assisted the CAEC in organising the Pride event.

Pliny Soocoormanee, a Mauritian LGBT+ campaigner, said people marched in the hopes of building “a real rainbow nation” and to push for a more tolerant and inclusive society in Mauritius.

“We are part of a wave of change. LGBT+ liberation can be delayed but won’t be denied.”


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Way to go, Mauritius! flex.gif
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post Oct 16 2020, 03:50 PM

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Boys Of West Hollywood Want To Tell You How To “Gay It Forward”…
Source: https://gusmen.com/2016/01/25/boys-west-hol...ell-gay-forward



Anthony GilĂŠt walked the streets of West Hollywood to help gay men pass on their advice to the younger generation. The men write some seriously touching messages of advice and encouragement, while some offer more practical advice.

There’s everything from “trust yourself” to “get 3 pics before you hook up”. Could be handy?
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post Oct 17 2020, 07:59 PM

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QUOTE(sorbonne @ Oct 17 2020, 03:10 PM)
Puppies!! wub.gif (The firemens are nice too I guess tongue.gif)

QUOTE(Rickman2000 @ Oct 17 2020, 03:13 PM)
I also found that some LGBT ppl in dating apps
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What do you mean? LGBT people also want to date so of course we are in the dating apps.

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