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N.J.’s only LGBT Chamber advocates for its ever increasing number of members – NJ.com

In discussions surrounding the LGBTQ+ community, social issues tend to be at the forefront.

However, an organization that promotes itself as the only LGBTQ+ chamber of commerce in the state wants others to know: that doesn’t always have to be the case.

“When you think of the LGBT community and issues, most people probably don’t think of business,” said Joseph Renga, president of the chamber. “So the purpose of establishing the chamber was to put a spotlight on our business owners so people would know and the corporate world would know that there is an LGBT business community.”

The New Jersey LGBT Chamber of Commerce, an affiliate of the National LGBT Chamber of Commerce, is a volunteer-driven organization founded in 2013 to connect and strengthen LGBT-owned businesses in the Garden State.

One of the primary goals of the chamber is to advocate for New Jersey to recognize and certify these kinds of businesses as minority-owned businesses.

“Right now just (racial) minority, small, women, veteran and disability-owned businesses are recognized under that umbrella,” said Stephen Blazejewski, vice president of Fundraising and Corporate Relations for the chamber. “We’re working on advocating for LGBT Business Enterprise certification as part of the state and municipal government contracting. And I think that’s what sets us apart.”

The chamber is actively petitioning support from state and local assembly people to further this goal. According to Blazejewski, only three municipalities in the state recognize LGBT in their own municipal contracting: Jersey City, Hoboken, and Newark.

Renga explained that the minority-owned certification would heighten the awareness of LGBT-owned businesses amongst large corporations and enable the business owners to give their establishments a “leg up” in their industries.

“Many corporations and government agencies are looking to make a proactive attempt to give a portion of their spend to small business owners, especially minority-owned businesses,” Renga said. “So that’s the important point: getting recognized as a minority-owned business and getting certified as such will bring your business to the next level with that large client that every small business needs and that keeps you stable for awhile.”

In addition to these efforts, the chamber puts together networking events for its members, all of which have been exclusively virtual for over a year due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The organization also conducts peer-to-peer virtual webinars.

“Education is key for us in terms of trying to deliver value to our members,” Blazejewski said. “If chamber members are subject matter experts in their own fields, they can come in and request to deliver a presentation to the rest of our membership.”

Renga said the chamber prioritizes outreach to college students to prepare them to become business professionals after graduating.

“We understand: if you’re getting right out of college, it can be tough to get a job,” Renga. “What helps you to get a job is a referral, quite frankly. So we like to work with college students as interns … to help get them business connections within the LGBT business community.”

The chamber’s efforts to connect LGBT businesses in New Jersey have been increasingly successful, the number of organization members more than tripling over the last three years.

“I joined the board in 2018, and at that time we had about 35 dues-paying members,” Blazejewski said. “Right now we’re well over 120 members. So it’s been pretty exponential growth over the last few years, which we’re excited about.”

Renga said the chamber experienced its “largest growth” in 2020, which he believed was due to business owners’ desire to reshape their services in “creative ways” as well as connect with others in their community.

“Prior to COVID-19, the chamber did a minimum of four to five networking events every month all around the state … and the moment COVID hit, we went virtual, almost immediately,” Renga said. “We immediately instituted 2 to 3 virtual events every month … and because they were isolated, people were looking for an outlet and some way to communicate.

“So the virtual events became quite popular, and people started joining because they thought, ‘It’s a community,’”

While continuing to offer a range of virtual events, the chamber is also currently planning a post-pride event that will double as a welcome back to in-person networking for members, Blazejewski said.

Both Blazejewski and Renga said the chamber is also a safe space for the LGBTQ+ community.

“You never know what the response is to you being a person in this community,” Renga said. “So we provide a safe space to say, ‘Hey, it’s OK for you to be out.’ And we engage LGBT employee groups all the time because we want them to know there’s a small business community and we want them to engage corporate America.”

Blazejewski added, “Where these business owners might otherwise be disadvantaged because they identify as LGBT, we’re offering that space to say, ‘No, this a safe spot for you to come and share your ideas. And we want to learn from you and help you learn how to take your business to the next level.’”

Blazejewski said the chamber, more than anything else, acts as a family to its members.

“We have heard numerous times after our in-person events how different our culture is from many other chambers of commerce in the state, which sometimes have a reputation of being cliquey or unwelcoming,” he said. “Our members and supporters are genuinely excited to connect with new attendees and will go out of their way to help someone they just met, even if they aren’t getting anything in return.”

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Caroline Fassett may be reached at cfassett@njadvancemedia.com.

The Talk – Carl Nassib Coming Out as Gay is ‘important’ for NFL – Yahoo Entertainment

The Telegraph

Fast & Furious 9, review: demented nonsense, but Vin Diesel is having a ball

Dir: Justin Lin. Starring: Vin Diesel, John Cena, Michelle Rodriguez, Tyrese Gibson, Chris ‘Ludacris’ Bridges, Nathalie Emmanuel, Sung Kang, Jordana Brewster, Charlize Theron, Helen Mirren, Kurt Russell. 12A cert, 143 mins Towards the end of Fast & Furious 9, two of the film’s ragtag heroes drive a rocket-powered sports car off the back of an aeroplane and up into space, with a view to ramming a weaponised satellite out of orbit. “As long as we obey the laws of physics, we’ll be fine,” says Tej

Carl Nassib comes out as gay, an NFL first – News 1130

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Vatican Expresses Deep Reservations Over Gay Rights Bill in Italy – The New York Times

“Certainly if it’s a worry for the Holy See, it is a worry for each one of us,” Cardinal Kevin Joseph Farrell, the prefect for the Vatican office for Laity, Family and Life, said when asked about the letter in a news conference on Tuesday. “And a concern of which we naturally agree with.”

An official from the Vatican’s Secretariat of State said that the letter did not get into details, but referred to an article of the Lateran Treaty that clearly guaranteed religious liberty for the church in the practicing and teaching of its beliefs. He said the proposed law, if passed as is, would trample on those rights.

The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the letter’s contents, said that while the Vatican often sent such letters after the passage of laws, it decided in this instance to intervene early, during the legislative process, to try to stop it. The Vatican, the official said, considered itself well within its rights to do so, given the terms of the treaty.

In the Vatican’s reading of the bill, only admitting men to the priesthood, restricting marriage to a man and a woman, and refusing to teach gender theory in Catholic schools would all be considered discriminatory, and a crime. Asked why the Vatican had not intervened so strongly in other countries that have passed similar laws, the official said that, as far as the Vatican understood, the proposed law went further than other places.

The letter delivered to the Italian government, the official said, asserted that in the long tradition and teaching of the church, the differences between the sexes is critical, and that recognizing that difference was not discrimination, but part of its belief system. He added that the treaty guaranteed that the church would have the right to practice and teach that difference in Italy.

On Nov. 4, Italy’s lower house of Parliament approved a bill to add anti-L.G.B.T. motives to an existing law that makes discrimination, violence or incitement based on someone’s race or religion a crime punishable with up to four years in prison. To improve awareness and sensitivity to the issue, the law also establishes a national day of awareness about the dangers of anti-L.G.B.T. violence, including in schools.

Most Western European democracies have implemented similar laws, but in Italy, its passage in the Senate has met opposition from Catholic associations, right-wing politicians and even some feminist groups.

7 LGBT Travel Destinations to Visit This Summer – Condé Nast Traveler

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The rainbows are here, and while LGBTQ+ Pride season always marks the return of summer, this year it marks the return of travel, too. For many it’s been a long year void of face-to-face quality time with our favorite people. More than that, we’ve been separated from our favorite places, whether that’s a historic Cape Cod beach, mid-century modern desert oasis, renowned wine region, or sparkling metropolis. So now that we’re breaking out our luggage again, where are our hearts leading us? For queer travelers, a few cherished destinations stand out for being rich in LGBTQ+ heritage and culture, where nothing can take the place of the real-life, in-person community spirit.

Canadian lawmakers pass bill criminalizing LGBT conversion therapy – Reuters

People walk on Parliament Hill the morning after the federal election in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada October 22, 2019. REUTERS/Patrick Doyle

OTTAWA, June 22 (Reuters) – Canada’s House of Commons on Tuesday passed a bill criminalizing LGBT conversion therapy 263 to 63, handing a win to the minority ruling Liberal party which promised to ban the practice during an unveiling of its election platform in 2019.

Aimed at changing a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity, conversion therapy can include talk therapy, hypnosis, electric shocks and fasting. The American Medical Association has condemned the practice as “harmful and ineffective.”

The vote took place as the House tried to clear its legislative agenda before the summer break set to begin on Wednesday, and possible elections later this year. The bill now goes to the Senate.

The government’s budget bill, which includes key pandemic supports set to expire at the end of the month, remained in limbo.

The summer recess ends on Sept. 20 and an election could come as early as September.

The Liberals lead the main opposition Conservatives 34 to 30 according to a Leger poll published on Tuesday.

Reporting by Julie Gordon in Ottawa
Editing by Sonya Hepinstall

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

SF aims to collect LGBTQ data of its employees – Bay Area Reporter, America’s highest circulation LGBT newspaper

San Francisco has been a municipal leader when it comes to collecting sexual orientation and gender identity demographic data among its residents. Now, city leaders want to do the same with employees and those who apply for jobs with the city in a voluntary and anonymous way.

In order to do so, however, city officials need to jettison a restriction in the city’s municipal code that forbids it from inquiring into the “sexual orientation, practices, or habits” of city employees. Known as Chapter 12E, the City Employee’s Sexual Privacy Ordinance of the Administrative Code, it was enacted in 1985 during the height of the AIDS epidemic as a way to protect LGBTQ applicants and city employees from being discriminated against.

Despite local laws banning LGBTQ-based discrimination that had been adopted in the late 1970s, there was widespread concern among the general public about LGBTQ people transmitting the then-little-understood virus. Those fears led to city leaders wanting to strengthen protections for LGBTQ people seeking employment with City Hall or various city departments and their drafting of Chapter 12E.

Thirty-six years later that provision in the code is now hampering efforts to ensure LGBTQ people are adequately represented among city staff. Thus, Mayor London Breed and gay District 8 Supervisor Rafael Mandelman introduced new legislation Tuesday during the Board of Supervisors meeting that repeals 12E of the Administrative Code. They want to direct the Department of Human Resources, now led by out director Carol Isen, to collect voluntary and anonymous sexual orientation demographic data from city employees and applicants.

“This important policy change will provide the city with invaluable voluntary information about our LGBTQ+ workforce that will help us identify any potential barriers to city employment and promotions,” stated Isen. “We are building upon our efforts to support more pathways into city employment and creating a more diverse workforce. We look forward to implementing this change and expanding upon our efforts to create a workplace that is equitable, inclusive and welcoming to all.”

The city and county employs approximately 37,000 people, making it the largest employer in San Francisco. While it collects such information as to the gender and race of its employees, the city currently has no way of knowing how many LGBTQ people work for it.

In a statement to the Bay Area Reporter, Breed said doing so would assist the city’s “commitment to equity across our workforce and continue to advance LGBTQ+ rights across our city.”

Noting it is Pride Month in San Francisco, Breed added, “We are taking continued action to be a leader in hiring and retaining a diverse workforce that reflects our community that includes our LGBTQ+ community.”

Mandelman told the B.A.R. in a statement that, “LGBTQ city employees work hard every day to support the people of San Francisco. This legislation will allow the Department of Human Resources to better track our citywide diversity, equity, and inclusion goals and identify strategies to recruit LGBTQ employees into public service.”

He added that he was “grateful for Mayor London Breed’s leadership and partnership on this new legislation that will help San Francisco more effectively identify, measure, and address the needs of our city’s LGBTQ employees and applicants.”

The supervisors will likely take up the proposed code change in late July or early August. The board’s government audit and oversight committee will likely first hold a hearing on it and vote on whether all 11 supervisors should adopt the proposal.

In October 2018 Breed ordered all city agencies and departments that collect demographic data to update their forms, both paper and electronic, so that they include the option of nonbinary in addition to male and female when asking about gender identity. As part of her directive, Breed ordered the city’s human resources department and the Office of Transgender Initiatives to provide gender identity trainings to city employees as part of their required trainings on harassment prevention, implicit bias, and cross-cultural communications.

Most city agencies have been required to collect the SOGI information of the people they are serving since the summer of 2017. While there have been issues in instituting the data collection efforts, all but the city’s Department of Public Health have made great strides over the last four years in gathering the LGBTQ demographic information so it is useful in reviewing how they are serving the needs of the LGBTQ community.

As the B.A.R. reported in April, the health department’s SOGI data collection efforts have been hampered by its switching to a new records-keeping system called Epic during the 2018-2019 fiscal year. Just as it was ramping up work on converting tens of thousands of records and retraining thousands of clinical and non-clinical staff on how to use Epic, the COVID-19 pandemic hit, leading to a large portion of DPH’s IT and analyst resources being directed to focus on the health crisis.

According to its SOGI data report for the 2019-2020 fiscal year, the health department expects a process for data migration and validation will be possible perhaps as soon as later this year. In the meantime, DPH said it has arranged for an audit of its SOGI data collection to be undertaken by a researcher at UCSF.

Now that the city’s special command center it established to address the local response to the COVID pandemic, which drew city staff away from their regular work, has been closed down and those employees reassigned to their normal duties, Mandelman also called Tuesday for the supervisors to hold a hearing on the SOGI data reports for the 2019-2020 fiscal year that the city departments submitted at the end of 2020.

It also will likely be held by the board’s government audit and oversight committee, which last held a hearing regarding the city agencies’ SOGI data collection efforts in November 2019. Mandelman also called for the departments to provide an update on their SOGI data for the first half of the 2020-2021 fiscal year.

Therefore, the hearing on the SOGI data efforts would cover the period spanning from July 1, 2019, through December 31, 2020. Mandelman also requested that the city departments report on any LGBTQ data they gathered related to COVID, including cases, deaths, vaccinations and testing among LGBTQ residents and workers in the city.

As the B.A.R. has extensively documented since the start of the health crisis last March, COVID SOGI data on cases and testing was not initially collected by the city, or the state of California, until late in 2020. It is unclear what data there is on vaccinations, as earlier this year the B.A.R. reported that the state’s public health department was not tracking vaccinations among LGBTQ Californians.

Asked about that omission in the vaccine data during an LGBTQ virtual town hall in April by the B.A.R., state public health officer and director at the California Department of Public Health Dr. Tomás J. Aragón, formerly with San Francisco’s health department, pledged to improve the SOGI data collection for the inoculations but did not give specifics.

The city’s Department of Disability and Aging Services did help conduct a survey into COVID’s impact on the LGBTQ community. But the results of the survey have yet to be publicly released.

“It is important that we know as much as possible about the impacts of COVID in the queer community. We are hoping that DPH and other city departments will be able to provide COVID SOGI data beyond what is currently available on the DataSF portal, such as vaccination and testing rates,” Mandelman told the B.A.R. “If we have not been collecting that data, it is important to find out why.”

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Raiders’ Carl Nassib has top-selling NFL jersey after coming out as gay – Yahoo News

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Las Vegas Raiders player Carl Nassib is the top-selling NFL jersey across the Fanatics network after becoming the first active NFL player in history to come out as gay, ESPN reported Tuesday.

Why it matters: The popularity of Nassib’s jersey signals overwhelming support for the player, who said he was coming out now because “representation and visibility are so important.”

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  • The vast majority NFL players who are in the LGBTQ community are closeted due to fear that their identity will negatively impact their career, former NFL player Ryan O’Callaghan told Reuters in 2019.

Worth noting: Nassib said he will be donating $100,000 to the Trevor Project, a suicide prevention service for LGBTQ youth in the U.S.

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SC bill allows mental health professionals to refuse care based on beliefs – WTOC

CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) – South Carolina lawmakers are considering a new bill that would allow mental health professionals to deny care based on their beliefs.

The bill, sponsored by Sen. Josh Kimbrell of Spartanburg, would be an update to an existing law that allows doctors and health care providers to refuse non-emergency procedures based on their religious, moral, ethical, or philosophical beliefs.

It would extend those protections to therapists, psychologists, and licensed counselors.

The bill is considered a response to an ordinance the city of Columbia passed, which bans conversion therapy for minors.

Opponents of the bill believe it will allow professionals to discriminate against people, especially those in the LGBTQ community. They also believe it will make access to mental health care, more difficult.

Melissa Moore, the Lowcountry manager for the Women’s Rights and Empowerment Network, says the bill is harmful, as well as broad, and far sweeping.

“It would allow anyone at any level at any time in health care to deny care to a person, so you can imagine what that might look like. For example, a person who needs COVID-related care can be denied that care because they are gay,” Moore said. “We hope our legislators will vote no on this bill and that it will allow people to pay more attention to what’s happening in the legislature, and we need to push our elected officials to do things that help our constituents instead of harming them.”

On Monday, the Senate Medical Affairs subcommittee held a hearing on the bill.

Kimbrell started the hearing with an explanation of what the bill will do. He says the bill is not an attack on anybody.

“If someone wants to come out and have a medical practice or mental health practice that affirms LGBTQ youth that is absolutely allowed and legal. No one is after that, I’m not after that,” Kimbrell said. “What has happened is we have seen efforts by cities to ban anybody who disagrees with that particular viewpoint and that’s, in my view, a violation of the first amendment.”

Supporters who spoke during the hearing say the bill protects free speech and gives parents the right to choose the care for their child.

Lawmakers are hoping to hold another subcommittee hearing later this summer.

Copyright 2021 WCSC. All rights reserved.

Netflix’s ‘Katla’ Is a Stunning Sci-Fi Series That Will Chill You to the Core – Thrillist

The eerie new Netflix sci-fi series Katla drops viewers off in Vík, a real-life Icelandic village positioned dangerously close to the subglacial volcano the show is named for. Although Katla hasn’t actually erupted violently in more than a century, the premise here is that the volcano activated a year ago, imperiling the town and traumatizing the few residents who remain, while also somehow unleashing mind-boggling supernatural phenomena in the form of naked, ash-covered doppelgängers.

Created by Contraband and 2 Guns director Baltasar Kormákur, Katla pairs nicely with the captivating foreign Netflix original Dark; while the German time-travel series, which concluded after three seasons last year, is more complex, both shows create suspense through slow pacing and deeply intertwined storylines. The eight episodes follow Vík’s remaining residents, including Grima (played by Guðrún Ýr Eyfjörð, a.k.a Icelandic singer GDRN), who remains tethered to the damn-near apocalyptic conditions of her hometown, despite the disappearance of her sister Ása (Íris Tanja Flygenring) during the eruption and the suicide of their mother in their childhood years. She works closely with the head of police, Gísli (Þorsteinn Bachmann), as a rescue worker, and quickly finds herself entrenched in the mystery affecting her village as the arriving changelings gradually unravel them mentally and cause them to confront their demons.

With such a chilling premise, it’s only fitting that Katla, Netflix’s first original out of Iceland, is shot on location on the south end of the island nation. The stark landscape of Vík is so vividly haunting, and the grim side effects of Katla’s recent activity—from the monstrous thunderstorm cloud that menacingly hovers over the subglacial volcano to the dangerous ash storms that threaten everything in their paths—are absolutely horrifying, making the inexplicable appearance of the ash-covered humanoids even more unsettling.

Katla‘s eeriness is also the byproduct of its sluggish tempo. For a show in which clones mysteriously appear near a dangerously active volcano, Katla resists the urge to rush things. To be fair, the changelings that are popping up on the glacier near Vík aren’t aliens, violent creatures picking off residents one by one, or any of the typical intimidating adversaries that prevail in the science fiction genre. As the changelings collide with Vík’s residents, their true nature and the reason for their bizarre emergence start to become clear. While the story might not culminate in the seismic reveal you might expect, given Katla‘s premise, the understated twist (which I won’t spoil here) has huge implications for the Icelandic series and ensures that Katla doesn’t cast aside its creepy and carefully crafted aesthetic for a feel-good ending.

Taking into account that the series closes with a cliffhanger, it’s unclear whether Kormákur envisioned Katla as a one-and-done or as the first chapter of an even bigger, mind-blowing story. Regardless, the artful and chilling sci-fi series absolutely stuns over the course of its eight episodes, and deservedly earns a slot on our list of the most compelling shows of the year.

Man hit over the head with glass bottle while walking dogs with date in Northeast D.C. – Metro Weekly

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Crime scene tape – Photo: Fer Gregory

A man was hit over the head with a glass beer bottle while walking with a date in nearby Northeast D.C. last Friday, in an incident that police believe may be a hate crime.

Aaron Arnwine, of Capitol Heights, Maryland, told Metro Weekly in an interview that he was watching movies with his date at his home on Friday evening, and decided they should walk his dogs. During the walk, they ventured across the D.C.-Maryland border toward the intersection of 63rd Place NE and Banks Place NE. There, a young man was sitting on the passenger side of a car with the door open. When the couple walked passed him, he began yelling homophobic slurs at them.

“There were no public displays of affection or anything, but as soon as we walked around him, he just got out of the car and started yelling, “F—-ts, f—ts, f—-ts” over and over and over again,” Arnwine said. “And then I turned around and said something along the lines of ‘Come on, man,’ and then cussed him out, told him to go to hell. And I turned around and continued walking the dogs.

“My date was probably like 20, 30 feet in front of me at this point. And [the young man] came up, ran up from behind me and broke a beer bottle over my head. I turned and started heading back towards him and asked my date to call 911,” Arnwine continued. “As soon as I started to head back towards him, I don’t know if he realized, ‘Oh, I didn’t knock about him out,’ or whatever, but he took off and ran into an alleyway that was across the street. But he left the door to the car he was in open. Luckily for me, he ran, because if he had gotten in his car and drove it off, I may not have been able to get the license plate, make, and model of the car. And the car was still there, with the door open, when the cops arrived.”

Arnwine’s date called 911 and officers from the Metropolitan Police Department arrived within six minutes. The two men told their stories to a detective, and Arnwine got checked out by paramedics. He said he overheard a cop call in the crime over the police radio, referring to the attack as an “ADW,” or assault with a dangerous weapon, and a possible hate crime.

“I really didn’t sustain any injury. There might have been a speck of blood, but it didn’t hurt. It still doesn’t hurt. I never got sore. I never got headaches, nothing,” Arnwine told Metro Weekly. “So the cops, they found the bottle, fingerprinted the car, and did all that other stuff.”

Arnwine and his date later talked with a member of the LGBTQ Liaison Unit of MPD at his home. Thus far, no one has been arrested, but Arnwine was scheduled to go into the police station on Monday afternoon to look at an array of photos and see if he could identify his assailant.

The suspect is described as being in his late 20s, about 5’10”, with matted or dreadlocked short hair, wearing blue jeans and a white T-shirt or tank top.

See also: Trans teen attacked by anti-LGBTQ mob at Florida middle school

The attack marks the third such suspected hate crime this month involving a victim who is a member of the LGBTQ community. 

Earlier this month, a transgender woman was attacked by three people yelling anti-gay slurs at her inside a laundromat in Northeast D.C. During the course of an altercation, one of the three stabbed the victim in the head, leaving her bleeding into a wastebasket in a corner. Police used footage from security cameras to identify suspects, and eventually arrested three people, charging them with assault with a dangerous weapon.

On Pride weekend, police arrested a 13-year-old youth and charged him with assault with a dangerous weapon for allegedly wielding a machete and threatening to cut a patron who was going to Shaw’s Tavern in Northwest D.C. The victim said the teen hurled homophobic slurs at him, then came back to the restaurant with the machete, and began stabbing cicadas on the ground and flicking them at the victim, telling him, “I’ll silence you.” No one was injured in that incident.

Capt. David Hong, head of MPD’s special liaison branch, which investigates hate crimes, told FOX 5 that the LGBTQ Liaison Unit is not seeing any alarming trends or increases in hate crimes and that the three incidents are not related. All three cases remain under investigation, Hong said.

See also: Brazilian gay man gang-raped, forced to carve anti-gay slurs into body in “barbaric” attack

Arnwine says his advice to others is to be alert and aware of your surroundings in public, since attacks like this can happen anywhere and can be committed by anyone.

“This was on my normal dog-walking route. I’ve taken the dogs walking twice since. I may not do it at night so much, but if the dogs need to walk, they’re going to get a walk,” he said. “The neighbors all came out and were asking me if I was okay. Most of the neighbors are wonderful people. But it takes just takes one bad apple.”

Luckily, for Arnwine, his date was also a good sport, despite being scared and being unsure of where the confrontation was leading while it was happening.

“Honest to goodness, while I was standing with the cops, I was like, ‘This guy is never going to see me again.’ Because incidents like this can just sour everything. So I was more mad at the dude for possibly ruining the date than hitting me over the head with the bottle. I know that sounds stupid,” he added. “But he’s a good guy, he’s been nothing but supportive, and we’re planning on having another date soon.”

He added that he was speaking out publicly about the attack so that others will not have to face a similar situation.

“This is not the notoriety I want, but if getting this information out there helps somebody else, it’s worth it,” he said.

See also:

‘Big Gay Market’ coming to Fayetteville – KNWA

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (KNWA/KFTA) — The “Big Gay Market”, Northwest Arkansas’ queer maker’s market, is happening this Saturday, June, 26.

According to a news release from organizers, this is Northwest Arkansas’ first ever queer maker’s market.

The release says organizers Amanda Arafat and Grayce Holcomb were inspired by the recent wave of legislation they believed to be anti-trans in Arkansas to create a space to celebrate the work of queer makers while raising funds for Intransitive Arkansas.

The market will be located at 418 S. Government Avenue in Fayetteville in the outdoor market space across from the Walmart Neighborhood Market on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, according to the release.

“The mission of the ‘Big Gay Market’ is to introduce a rich network of queer small businesses and their owners to the Fayetteville community in a way that is accessible, approachable, and charitable,” Arafat said.  “In a local economy that is dominated by big box stores such as Walmart and Sam’s Club, we felt there should be a space during pride month dedicated to celebrating our local queer makers.”

The release says the market will feature a lineup of 23 vendors with wares ranging from art to baked goods, jewelry, home decor, woodworking, poetry, vintage clothing, and more.

For more information, follow their Instagram at @biggaymarket.

Vendors:

  • Mik Hoffman / hand-built ceramics
  • Cirro Studio / wood working
  • Damned2Divine  / reworked, handmade, and vintage clothing
  • Goldenhour Vintage / vintage clothing
  • Ozark Circle for Choice / mutual aid + educational network
  • Maximiliano Calabotta / artist
  • Brody Parrish Craig / poet
  • Basil Bakes / baker
  • Overfill / low-waste home + body products
  • Make it Pop / cake pops
  • PTSFeminist / art + jewelry + literature
  • Corrie’s Creations / hand-painted planters
  • The Eclectic Witch / jewelry + bath salts + candles
  • Ashley Nielsen / visual art + tattoo art and bookings
  • Secondhand Silver / curated vintage home goods + decor
  • Lemun Sprout Designs / multi-media art
  • Dani Clauson / original drawings + poetry
  • Speakeasy Tattoo Lounge / shirts + prints + stickers
  • Moonkive / handmade jewelry + paintings
  • Nini9Souls / handmade suncatchers + jewelry
  • Galactic Bunz / rave wear
  • Grayce Holcomb / artist + designer
  • Amanda Bakes / baker

POLICE BLOTTER – Yahoo News

Jun. 22—Information provided by area law enforcement agencies. Criminal charges are merely accusations and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

Decatur Co. Sheriff’s Dept.

Arrests

June 21

9:03 p.m.: Nicholas Edward Lee, 28, Lebanon, was arrested on preliminary charges of unlawful entry of a motor vehicle and public intoxication.

Greensburg Fire Dept.

June 21

4:50 p.m.: Accident, type unknown, reported at Ind. 46 and CR 850 E.

June 22

12:29 a.m.: Fire/smoke odor reported in the 300 block of N. Anderson Street.

New Point Fire Dept.

June 21

4:50 p.m.: Accident, type unknown, reported at Ind. 46 and CR 850 E.

Westport Fire Dept.

June 21

1:01 p.m.: Illegal burn reported in the 1100 block of N. Kentucky Ave.

Seattle LGBT Group Speaks Out against Pride Event Charging White Attendees ‘Reparations’ – Yahoo News

In the city of Seattle, an organization called Capitol Hill Pride hosts an annual festival to celebrate the LGBTQ community.

Capitol Hill Pride’s leaders say their goal is to create a welcoming environment for people from all walks of life in Seattle, so when they learned that an LGBT event — set to take place in the city’s Jimi Hendrix Park on Saturday — will bar white people unless they pay “reparations,” they sent a letter to the Seattle Human Rights Commission demanding an ethics investigation into what it said constituted “reverse discrimination.”.

Organizers of the black-exclusive event, coined “Take B(l)ack Pride,” advertised that “white allies and accomplices are welcome to attend, but will be charged a $10 to $50 reparations fee (and given a wrist band as proof of payment.” The ad suggested that the funds raised will go towards subsidizing black and brown trans and queer members as well as performers at the parade.

In an interview with National Review, Capitol Hill Pride Director Charlette LeFevre confirmed her group’s rejection of the initiative and clarified their own mission: “We’re all inclusive, not exclusive.”

After reading Capitol Hill Pride’s statement, Seattle City Council president and mayoral candidate M. Lorena González decided to withdraw from Capitol Hill Pride’s festival.

“I will no longer be attending Capitol Hill Pride after reading their letter to the Seattle Human Rights Commission,” she said.

“After a year that has taken an unbelievable toll on all of our communities, I was looking forward to this opportunity to celebrate Pride in person. However, I simply cannot support an organization that is trying to stop Black people in the LGBTQ+ community from celebrating Pride in the manner that they choose,” she added.

LeFevre noted that it’s concerning that a political figure in the city would take such counter-productive, exclusionary views.

“There’s concern because there is a city council candidate involved. Candidates, when they run for office, are supposed to represent all constituents, not a select group or even political party. Seattle has a lot of division right now with candidates, and they take an oath to serve everyone,” she commented.

The Capitol Hill Pride letter reiterated the organization’s commitment to true equality rather than reparative justice that still disenfranchises some people i.e. white gay individuals.

“We will never charge admission over the color of a person’s skin and we resent being attacked for standing in those values,” the complaint concluded.

The Seattle pride controversy comes after New York City’s Pride event organizers announced it would ban police officers from marching in their annual parade until at least 2025, regardless of sexual orientation.

The Gay Officers Action League, representing gay law enforcement members, lamented the decision in a public release, calling the ban an “abrupt about-face” and saying that the move to “placate some of the activists in our community is shameful.”

More from National Review

‘A long way to go’: Timber Rattlers and LGBTQ advocates work to advance inclusivity in local sports – WGBA-TV

GRAND CHUTE, Wis. (NBC 26) — One night aimed to help change sports in Northeast Wisconsin.

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“We’ve certainly been in sports, but you may not have ever seen or noticed us,” Diverse & Resilient youth advocate Reiko Ramos said. “Athletic activities are frankly not a place that LGBTQ people have been always welcome; still aren’t always welcome.”

The Wisconsin Timber Rattlers held Pride Night on Tuesday to advance inclusivity in sports. But advocates like Ramos say LGBTQ fans and players still need more support.

“Sports are gender segregated, so there really hasn’t been an equitable playing field for LGBTQ athletes,” Ramos said.

On Monday in the midst of Pride Month, active NFL player Carl Nassib made history by coming out as gay.

Raiders’ player Carl Nassib comes out as gay in social media post

“It’s always a big deal any time an athlete comes out, and it’s kind of sad that that’s the case,” Ramos said.

That’s why the second-ever Pride Night touches home for the Timber Rattlers.

“We actually had an openly-gay player on our team as well back in 2015, David Denson,” team Entertainment Coordinator Jake Jirschele said.

According to a 2018 NCAA survey, nearly 20 percent of people in Division III athletics identified as LGBTQ.

“We hope that this impacts more minor league baseball teams and the surrounding teams in our areas, and hopefully around the nation as well,” Jirschele said about the night’s festivities.

While local events work to provide a safe sporting environment, Ramos says it’s just one step.

“We have definitely made progress, but we do have a long way to go,” Ramos said.

According to the team, the T-Rats partnered with the Wisconsin LGBT Chamber Of Commerce to welcome fans.