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‘Game pieces in the culture wars’ | Penn Today – Penn Today

More than 250 bills aimed at reducing the rights of LGBTQ+ people are currently working their way through state legislatures in the United States, or have already been passed. Thirty-three states, including Pennsylvania, have introduced upwards of 100 bills specifically targeting transgender and gender non-conforming children and adults. As the country begins to emerge from the pandemic’s shadow, 2021 is shaping up to be a banner year in many ways, including an unprecedented amount of proposed anti-trans legislation.  

Meanwhile on a national level, the Education Department announced on June 16 that discrimination against students on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity is prohibited under Title IX, a 1972 law that prohibits sex-based discrimination in federally funded schools. The change reverses one of numerous Trump-era policies curtailing transgender rights.

“We definitely are in the middle of a major cultural war, a major political war,” says Heather Love, professor of English in the School of Arts & Sciences. “You can’t go through the Trump presidency and not think that there is a kind of crisis around white male identity.” Many of the societal problems plaguing America—like deindustrialization and affordable health care—are difficult to fix, she says, while policing bathrooms and locker rooms is more manageable and easier to accomplish.

progressive lgbtq flag
Philadelphians celebrate the outcome of 2020’s presidential election, waving the Progress Pride Flag while marching through Center City. The U.S. saw the rollback of trans civil rights protections in health care, education, housing, employment, and other areas under the Trump administration. (Image: Rashaad Jorden, also featured on homepage)

When there is pent-up tension within society, “gender and sexuality provide an easy outlet for persecution,” Love says. “Trans youth are being attacked in that context, as a vulnerable population that is continually served up, like game pieces in the culture wars.”

“I’m not sure if the intent is actually to cause trans death,” says Love, “but that will certainly be the effect.”

‘A level playing field’

Of the 117 state bills focusing on gender identity that were introduced in 2021, 58 target gendered spaces and activities such as bathrooms, locker rooms, and school sports. Twenty-nine aim to further restrict access to gender-affirming medical care. 

The sports-related bills would require students to play on teams consistent with their birth-assigned sex, framing it as a Title IX issue. This includes HB 972, Pennsylvania’s “Save Women’s Sports Act.”

Athletics is often portrayed as “a level playing field,” says Love, “cordoned off from all the inequalities and power dynamics that we know to be true in society. You just put everybody on the field and they can work it out in some kind of fair arena.” 

We’re talking about mental health issues, we’re talking about separation from community and family. There are economic [and] educational repercussions and consequences for not allowing folks to be who they are. Causha Antoinette Spellman, a Ph.D. student in the School of Social Policy & Practice

In reality, she says, sports are integrated into culture, and in the U.S. they can be tied to scholarships, accolades, and even future earnings. Citing a 2020 Connecticut lawsuit, detractors claim transgender girls would have an unfair physiological advantage over cisgender teammates if allowed to play on girls’ teams. This, some lawmakers have alleged, would deny young cisgender women athletic scholarships, despite the fact that no trans students have been offered athletic scholarships since the NCAA approved a trans-inclusive policy in 2011. Trans-identified people make up 0.6% of U.S. adults, according to a 2020 Gallup poll.

“Is there this huge group of trans women taking over athletics?” asks Erin Cross, director of the University’s LGBT Center. “No. A lot of these bills are out of fear. The fear of not being able to put people into boxes. 

“This is a way to build up ideas around fear that the country is changing, and we need to hold on to our old values,” continues Cross. “I think a lot of these folks have never met a transgender person. A trans person—you’ll see—[is] just like anybody else.”

This includes Lia Thomas, co-chair of Penn Non-Cis, a club that aims to build community for trans and non-cis people. “One of my big concerns for trans people is feeling alone,” she says. “Even if you don’t pay attention to the news … [about] states proposing and passing vicious anti-trans legislation, it can feel very lonely and overwhelming.” 

For Thomas, relief has always been found in the water. Swimming is “a huge part of my life and who I am. I’ve been a swimmer since I was five years old,” she says. “The process of coming out as being trans and continuing to swim was a lot of uncertainty and unknown around an area that’s usually really solid. Realizing I was trans threw that into question. Was I going to keep swimming? What did that look like?” 

Thomas took a year off during the pandemic and will swim for the Penn women’s team in her senior year. “Being trans has not affected my ability to do this sport and being able to continue is very rewarding,” she says.

‘Saving adolescents’

In April, 2021, under the “Save Adolescents from Experimentation (SAFE) Act,” Arkansas became the first state to ban doctors from administering hormones or puberty blockers to minors. Puberty blockers, which are also administered to treat precocious puberty in cisgender children, are sometimes prescribed to trans children experiencing gender dysphoria to delay the onset of secondary sex characteristics. Were a child to cease taking these medications, by choice or by circumstance, puberty would resume its initial course. 

Trans youth are being attacked …as a vulnerable population that is continually served up, like game pieces in the culture wars. Heather Love, professor of English in the School of Arts & Sciences

Studies have found that trans and gender non-conforming youth are at a greater risk of suicidality than the general population, and that access to gender-affirming care and social support significantly lowers that risk. Yet, Love says, language in laws like the SAFE Act suggests that government inference is necessary to protect children from harm. “There’s a kind of fantasy that, because they’re in the space of development, somehow trans life could be stopped,” says Love. “If you stop youth from becoming trans then you solve the problem, whereas we know that not to be the case. … Unfortunately, it’s a time when people are extremely vulnerable.”

People in Los Angeles protest in 2020 against police brutality
People in Los Angeles protest in 2020 against police brutality. According to the HRC’s annual report, at least 44 transgender and gender-nonconforming people, a disproportionate number of whom were Black trans women, were killed in the U.S. in 2020. (Image: Mike Von on Unsplash)

“The biggest misconception is that trans people are confused and you can change them,” says Causha Antoinette Spellman, a social welfare Ph.D. student in the School of Social Policy & Practice. “We’ll look back on this time and there will have been a concentration of suicides as a result of children and youth not being able to be who they are.” 

“We have a big fear response to anything that deviates from ‘normality,’” says Spellman. Western society, they say, claims that its citizens need to operate from within binaries or the system won’t work, but what that really means is that the system will no longer uphold patriarchal privilege. Spellman says, “We know that a system that works for trans people works for everyone.” 

Spellman, who studies Black and Indigenous queer and trans youth at the intersection of the child welfare, mental health, and juvenile justice systems, came out as non-binary while in earning their masters in social work at the University of Hawaii. There, Spellman was surrounded by “an entire population and community of folks [for whom] the third gender, or māhū, was revered and were the holders of their culture,” they say. “Learning about that level of Indigeneity in a gender that doesn’t exist on the binary gave me the freedom that I didn’t find in Western culture.”

Gender expansion

When it comes to ideas about gender, Love says there is “a real groundswell of transformation in the U.S., particularly among young people,” and these bills are a direct response to try and stop that transformation. “You can limit access to health care or punish people who are in schools at the moment, but these are violent measures that can’t really stop the wave of what’s happening,” she says. 

“It’s collapsing,” agrees Amy Hillier, associate professor in the School of Social Policy & Practice. “The monster appears biggest before it falls.”

“The idea that everybody fits neatly into this boy or girl category, this man and woman category, is oppressive for anyone who wants to know themselves better,” Hillier says. “It’s imposed on us, it’s a form of social control, and it doesn’t give us room to explore.” 

(Image: Ted Eytan)
While the American Academy of Pediatrics supports a gender-affirmative care model, proposed bills like Texas Senate Bill 1646 seek to criminalize caregivers for providing minors with medical access. (Image: Ted Eytan)

Judith Butler and other queer theorists argue that gender has been “made to seem like the most central, biologically natural thing in the world,” says Love. “You know, people are just men or women, get used to it. That’s a fact. But if it were actually so natural, if it were actually just the way things are, why would you need such violent policing around it?” Love asks. “You have to force it to appear natural.”

Ideas about sex and gender have shifted throughout history, says Spellman. An estimated 1-2% of the U.S. population is intersex, and gender roles have always varied by culture, era, and influence. “What we now call transgender or gender expansive has existed in Indigenous cultures across the world since the beginning, as long as people have existed,” they say. “There was a time when wigs and high heels were reserved for men of high esteem, and high caliber, and money and power. Somewhere along the line, it shifted to femininity and therefore weakness.”

Sexism and patriarchy are at the heart of these efforts, says Hillier. “The gender binary is about keeping people in their place. It’s very threatening when folks start to question these categories. For some folks, it’s the undoing of the moral order.”

The ramifications of legislation

Trans and gender non-conforming individuals are disproportionately exposed to violence, discrimination, and suicidal ideation, says Spellman. Losing access to gender-affirming care or being legislated out of participating in public life amplifies all of these risks. This vulnerability worries Spellman. 

PFLAG members march in the 2012 Capital Pride parade
PFLAG members march in the 2012 Capital Pride parade. LGBTQ youth who report having at least one accepting adult in their lives were 40% less likely to report a suicide attempt in the past year, according to the Trevor Project’s 2019 National Survey on LGBTQ Youth Mental Health. (Image: Adam Fagen)

“I’m scared. We’re talking about mental health issues, we’re talking about separation from community and family,” they say. “There are economic [and] educational repercussions and consequences for not allowing folks to be who they are.” 

Spellman is particularly concerned about the mental impact of the proposed and passed bills on trans youth, especially as states reopen. School-age children have to navigate a return to physical classrooms and the ensuing academic push from teachers and administration. “What they’re missing,” says Spellman, is that students “won’t be on track academically” if they’re simultaneously navigating restrictions around gender expression and bathroom usage.  

“Everyone is probably aware of a young person in crisis right now,” Love says. But for trans and gender non-conforming youth in particular, the collision of this onslaught of anti-trans legislation with the emergence from more than a year of isolation is a crisis moment, she says. From Love’s perspective, athletic participation is not about getting a trophy, but about developing a basic sense of well-being: “To cut off people’s access to this kind of affirmation and community, especially now, seems like an incredible act of cruelty.”

Watch As The Ballroom Scene Stages A Takeover At The Savoy – British Vogue

For him, Pride and all that it encompasses is “the ability to step out publicly, be able to represent yourself so that you are being seen in society, to have space and a community that is there for you. Pride is about being able to exist, even politically, or authentically within yourself, and to be able to rock up and celebrate and represent.”

Representation is at the core of all of London’s work. Whether it be spotlighting the experiences of those involved in the ballroom scene as seen in his British Vogue film, or past projects, he sees his role as a director as one of sharing other people’s stories, and does so in ways that are as sensitive as they are beautiful. 

“It’s about holding a mirror up to the stories [that reflect what] people are about,” he explains. “I’m motivated by being able to tell those particular stories as thoroughly, viscerally, unapologetically and artistically as possible, in order for those people to feel seen and validated. Of course, it is also about being able to actually solve issues through film empathy, too.” By film empathy, London means encouraging a viewer to put themselves in another person’s shoes. “If I’m able to do that, to get more and more people to feel and have empathy, then that lights my fire.”

Celebrate Pride Month with These LGBTQIA+Latinx Fashion Brands – BELatina

LGBTQIA+ Latinx Brands BELatina Latinx
Photo: Pexels

Pride is here, and throughout the month of June, you’ll see LGBTQIA+ pride displayed everywhere, in the form of the rainbow, and its hues, empowering messages for the community(ies), and brands showing their love and support. In addition to brands that show solidarity as allies, many brands are created by, and for, LGBTQIA+ people. And several of those are from Latinx folks. 

We want to help you celebrate Pride today, this month, and every day after that. And what better feeling than to rock an LGBTQIA+-brand T-shirt, phone case, or hat, knowing that it also came from someone who is Latinx, just like you? We found several brands that are not only LGBTQIA+ but also Latinx, and we are definitely here for that. Have a fabulous Pride Month, everybody!

Jen Zeano Designs

Jen Zeano Designs, home of the Pink Latina Power tee, is a popular Latinx brand that numerous Latinx publications have written about. It was created in 2014, of course, by Mexican Jen Zeano; Chicana wife Vero joined the company as a full-time employee in 2018. One of their cutest designs is a rainbow-colored tee that shows the world that you are “bien supportive” of the LGBTQIA+ community; there’s also one that proudly lets the public know you are “bien gay.”

Bien Supportive Pride Tee, Available at jenzeanodesigns.com, $34-$36

Escándalo XYZ 

Ramiro Alexis Gonzalez got online buzz for his clothing that was sold under the name Jotx Wear. But now it’s time for Escándalo XYZ, and its fun finds. You’ll find “everyday performance wear” here, in the form of sequined gloves, imaginative tops, fabulous ornate robes and coats, and party-worthy ruffled dresses. Everything is sold out right now, but keep an eye out for new items that Ramiro makes himself at his home with a Singer sewing machine. 

Available at escandalo.xyz; (everything is currently sold out but check back!)

A Tribe Called Queer

LGBTQIA+ brands are all about inclusion and celebration and creating a safe community that many can be a part of. A Tribe Called Queer was created by Sabine Maxine Lopez, a “queer Black Indigenous hard femme from Los Angeles, California.” Her work includes a podcast, blog, virtual events, a zine, and “a gender-neutral and size-inclusive clothing line.” A Tribe Called Queer is a substantial world for LGBTQIA+ people all onto itself, so definitely give all these different categories a visit. A shirt from the brand we loved is their Women of Color tee, which boldly–and truthfully–states that “women of color are the backbone of America.”

Women of Color T-shirt, Available at atribecalledqueer.com, $35

Brown Badass Bonita

Kim Guerra is the artist, entrepreneur, and writer behind Brown Badass Bonita. On the company’s Instagram account, she describes it as being “for mariposas giving themselves wings: you are the revolution. Advocating for justice & liberation through writing, creating, amor y ganas.” Here is where you go to feel empowered and uplifted. Whether it’s on a T-shirt, sticker, or the pages of one of Kim’s two books of poetry (Mariposa, and Mija, respectively), you will feel like a more bold version of yourself with the words you encounter. Kim Guerra created this pretty, Pride-worthy, Equal Love T-shirt in collaboration with Muy Cute Merch. 

Equal Amor Tee, Available at brownbadassbonita.com, $30

Muy Cute Merch LGBTQIA+ tote bag BELatina Latinx
Photo: Muy Cute Merch

Muy Cute Merch

Speaking of Muy Cute Merch, it’s a Latinx LGBTQIA+ brand you should know about. Founded by graphic designer Danny Ramirez, Muy Cute Merch brings together things that “Danny…personally loves in regards to Latinx pop culture, the LGBTQIA+ community, positivity, humor, and inclusivity.” The result is an adorable pop of pink everywhere, a funny face mask (“too cute for COVID”), cheeriness, and plenty of Latinx pop culture remixed for LGBTQIA+ peeps. 

Cumbias and Coronas Tote Bag, Available at muycutemerch.com, $15

Bianca Designs Co. 

LGBTQIA+ brands like Bianca Designs Co. ensure that there isn’t just one type of tee or cap to celebrate Pride in. There is something created for everybody, as diverse as the colors on the LGBTQIA+ flag. Queer Latinx artist Bianca Negron is the founder of Bianca Designs Co., and when you visit the brand’s website, you’ll be greeted by fun clothing, accessories, patches, pins, and stickers emblazoned with rainbow hues, positive messages (“the future is inclusive,” “beyond gender”), products for our ASL folks, pronouns buttons, and a pin for the proud parents of the LGBTQIA+ community. 

Inclusive Rainbow Future Pride Embroidered Dad Hat, Available at biancadesigns.co, $29.95 (pre-order; “expected to start shipping the week of June 4”)

Gay Pride Apparel

“Be you. Be proud. Year-round.” That’s the powerful message behind the Gay Pride Apparel brand. Created by couple Jesus Gutierrez and Sergio Aragon, the company, which makes apparel, accessories, and home goods, is all about celebrating being LGBTQIA+. Need a hat that says “love is love?” A throw blanket with the progressive pride flag on it? Or a cute kid’s tee that says, “I love my two dads?” Gay Pride Apparel has that and more. There are also items for allies of the LGBTQIA+ community(ies). 

Phone Cases, Available at gayprideapparel.com, $24-$26

PAY’S

PAY’S makes bright, bold, look-at-me “premium knitted goods for everyone.” We’re talking a matchy-matchy pink and white checkerboard set, an orange-to-blue ombre sheer LGBT Pride Crop Top, a vintage-video-game-like Mexican D.F. poncho, an optical illusion blanket, and of course, this summer-worthy striped Pride Kimono (there’s also a matching tank and shorts). The garments are designed by Raul and Molo and come from Mexico City, where there is also a PAY’S boutique. 

Pride Kimono, Available at ppaayyss.com, $97

Kalani + Wolf

The beauty of Kalani + Wolf is that it is Afro-Latina and LGBTQI+ owned. It also focuses on sustainability, where designer Joanis Duran and her team of seamstresses (all local) create and design pieces using top-grade, dead-stock fabric. As if it couldn’t get any better, her company places great emphasis on being zero waste and utilizing conscious packaging.

Olivia Pocket Maxi Dress, Available at https://kalaniandwolf.com/, $185

Chiefs News: Willie Gay Jr named biggest standout of Chiefs offseason – Arrowhead Pride

The latest

The Biggest Standout of Every NFL Team’s 2021 Offseason So Far | Bleacher Report

Kansas City Chiefs: LB Willie Gay

Since the 2020 campaign went so well, relatively speaking, too many forget teams didn’t have much of an offseason leading into the regular season.

Some rookies adjusted well. Others did not.

The Kansas City Chiefs chose linebacker Willie Gay in last year’s second round. Gay’s athletic profile makes him an ideal second-line defender in today’s pass-first league. But he admitted to struggling last year. Now, he’s making up for the lost time.

“It was tough,” Gay admitted told reporters. “To only see the playbook for the first time during training camp, it was hard. To get that head start right now in OTAs, it’s definitely helping a lot. I’m catching on to the things that I didn’t catch on to last year.

“I learned the basics. Now it’s the small details that make good great.”

Surprise players you should know from NFL minicamps for all 32 teams | ESPN

Kansas City Chiefs

TE Noah Gray

The fifth-round draft pick has impressed the Chiefs with his smarts, pass catching and route running. With the Chiefs looking to keep Travis Kelce fresh over the course of a 17-game schedule, it’s easy to see how Gray could get a significant amount of playing time, both in occasionally replacing Kelce and as part of multiple-tight-end formations. — Adam Teicher

Kansas City Chiefs confident in their running backs without Le’Veon Bell | ESPN

“There are things we’re implementing to get the ball to the backs, to spread it out more,” Edwards-Helaire said last week before the Chiefs concluded offseason practice. “That’s one of the things on why I chose to work on my hands and just be more of a threat. … Just being able to get out not just on routes out of the backfield but also spread out in the slot position and wide out position. Just being able to expand my skill set was my thing.

“I feel like I was a decent receiving back in college … we’re just kind of enhancing it.”

The Chiefs have moved on from veteran back Le’Veon Bell, who arrived in the middle of last season to some hype but wound up having little impact. His contract expired at the end of the season and the Chiefs showed no interest in re-signing Bell.

Ranking the 7 Best Players Who Remain on NFL’s 2021 Free-Agent Market | Bleacher Report

4. Edge Justin Houston

Justin Houston might not have a whole lot left at age 32, but the four-time Pro Bowler has put up at least eight sacks in each of the last four seasons with the Chiefs and Colts.

The key is you can no longer consider him an every-down player after he was on the field for just 59 percent of Indy’s defensive snaps despite starting 16 games in 2020. But there’s little reason to believe he can’t continue to serve as an effective situational pass-rusher for a contending team that has some money to spend on a short-term deal.

Besides, he’s far from a liability, having missed just four tackles the last two seasons combined.

Colts owner Jim Irsay said in April the team could bring Houston back, but the club has since used two premium draft picks on edge defenders Kwity Paye and Dayo Odeyingbo, so there’s a good chance he lands somewhere new in 2021.

Logical landing spots: Cowboys, Dolphins, Ravens, Vikings, Chiefs

Patriots running back changes number to honor his grandfather who played for Chiefs | Kansas City Chiefs

Running back Brandon Bolden has spent his entire eight-year career with AFC East teams, playing for the Patriots and Dolphins.

Bolden wore jersey number 38 for both franchises, including the 2019 season with New England. He opted out of last season because of the COVID-19 pandemic. When he takes the field this fall, Bolden will have a new number: 25.

The reason for the change? He’s honoring his grandfather, Frank Pitts, who was a receiver for the Chiefs from 1965-70.

Pitts, who is now 77 years old, caught three passes for 33 yards and rushed three times for 37 yards in the Chiefs’ Super Bowl IV victory over the Minnesota Vikings. He was also part of the Super Bowl I team that lost to the Packers.

Former Chiefs QB Tyler Palko arrested for DUI | Chiefs Wire

Former Chiefs QB Tyler Palso was arrested early Sunday morning in Johnson County, Kansas. The 37-year old was arrested for suspected driving under the influence, according to Johnson County Detention Bureau. He posted bail later that morning with no further details of his arrest.

Palko had his only two statistical NFL seasons with the Chiefs, spending both 2010 and 2011 with the team after going undrafted in 2007. In 2007, Palko signed with the New Orleans Saints serving primarily as a practice squad player before similar stops with the Arizona Cardinals and Pittsburgh Steelers.

Madden 22 Features: Dynamic Gameday Home-Field Advantages Revealed for Every NFL Team | VGR

What are AFC Teams’ Dynamic Gameday advantages?

Below are names and descriptions for each of the AFC teams’ home-field advantages or X-Factors available. They’ll either help the home team, or create disadvantages for the visiting team.

Baltimore Ravens – Truzz the System (While winning, home team gets bonus momentum on running plays)

Buffalo Bills – Downwind (Away team kick meter moves erratically)

Cincinnati Bengals – Who Dey? (No Huddle Results in reduced clock runoff)

Cleveland Browns – Dog Pound (Hot routes in the red zone have chance to fail)

Denver Broncos – Mile High (Away team has less stamina for plays)

Houston Texans – The Bullpen (Away team gains less momentum for touchdown

Indianapolis Colts – Hat Count (Home team defense sees Hat count via Coach Cam)

Jacksonville Jaguars – Duvall (Bonus momentum on touchdowns)

Kansas City Chiefs – Home of the Chiefs (Away team’s audibles have chance to fail)

Around the NFL

How Carl Nassib’s courageous announcement changed — and challenged — the NFL | NFL.com

With a nonchalance that belied the significance of the moment — ”I just wanted to take a quick moment to say that I’m gay” — Carl Nassib changed the NFL on Monday and challenged it, too.

Nassib is the first active player to come out as gay in NFL history and what he said a few sentences later, that he hopes these coming out announcements won’t even be necessary in the future, is just as important. Is the NFL ready for players to be out in the first place? Nassib’s statement took an extraordinary amount of courage — he agonized over it for 15 years, he said, not even mentioning that it is more than half as long as he has been alive. But what does it say about the culture of the NFL that it took so long for a player to feel comfortable coming out, that this still felt like an earthquake.

Sean McVay: Rams are ‘not gonna run away from the expectations’ | NFL.com

“Bro, this dude’s a bad MF-er,” McVay said of Stafford. “Whatever people say about him, as good as it can be, he’s even better than advertised. It makes sense to him. The guy’s ability to see the game, his ability to draw on his experiences, the feel that he has, it’s pretty special and unique. And man, his feel for people, his authentic way of connecting with his teammates, his coaches, this guy, it’s great being around him.”

Which NFL rookie receivers will be most productive in 2021? My analytics-based top-seven rankings | NFL.com

6 – Rashod Bateman

Minnesota

Baltimore Ravens

Draft pick: Round 1, No. 27 overall

Ravens wideouts only logged 41 receptions of 10-plus air yards last season, as well as just 78 catches for 952 receiving yards when aligned out wide — all NFL lows, per Next Gen Stats. (Baltimore was the only team to earn fewer than 1,200 yards from wide alignments.) Route-running precision is a metric my model values more than most, and Bateman thrives in this area, especially when aligned on the outside. I’ve found that route-running precision leading to separation in college typically plays well in the NFL. Over the past two seasons in the FBS, Bateman ranked No. 3 among wide receivers in terms of route-running efficiency (as measured by reliable timing and the ability to create separation) on routes run from outside alignment. Pro Football Focus adds additional context here: Over the past two seasons when it came to intermediate targets (10-19 air yards), Bateman ranked second in the FBS with 44 catches and third with 697 yards. The only reason he ranks sixth on this list is the volume of rushing plays the Ravens are still likely to run.

In case you missed it at Arrowhead Pride

Projecting the 2021 Chiefs offensive line 3.0

As I noted last time, one of the reasons the Brown deal was so good for the Chiefs was that it gave them the freedom to address other needs in the draft. Humphrey — taken with the 63rd overall pick in the second round — has seemed like the obvious starter right from the moment he was drafted.

Since then, the perception has only grown stronger. In my second projection — just days after he was drafted — I said it was “his job to lose.” Now it seems clear that it is simply his job. Only the fact that he is a rookie gives this any uncertainty.

And as you’ll see, that leads us to the last two positions on the line.

A tweet to make you think

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The Latest: Mount, Chilwell to isolate for 10 days – Daily Union

The Latest on soccer’s European Championship:

England says players Mason Mount and Ben Chilwell will continue isolating until Monday.

The 10-day isolation comes after they came into contact with Scotland midfielder Billy Gilmour at Wembley Stadium after Friday’s game.

England says the decision to extend the isolation followed talks with health authorities.

They will train alone.

Some Spain players were not happy with criticism from former Netherlands midfielder Rafael van der Vaart.

Van der Vaart is a commentator for a Dutch television channel at the European Championship and reportedly criticized Spain for its poor performances at the tournament. Spanish media quoted him as saying that the team was “horrible” and only “passes the ball from one side to the other.”

Van der Vaart was a former Real Madrid and Real Betis player. He was a member of the Dutch team that lost to Spain in the 2010 World Cup final.

Spain midfielder Koke Resurrección says Van der Vaart was “seeking his moment of glory” and that he remembers “seeing him in the World Cup final.”

Forward Pablo Sarabia says Van der Vaart “made a mistake” with his comments “especially being a former player.” Sarabia says his only recollection of him is from the 2010 World Cup “when things didn’t go well for him.”

Spain faces Slovakia in its final Group E match on Wednesday. It needs a win to secure a place in the next round after consecutive draws against Sweden and Poland.

UEFA has declined the Munich city council’s application to have its stadium illuminated in rainbow colors for Germany’s final group game against Hungary at the European Championship.

The governing body says it understands the intention behind the proposal but it “must decline this request” because of its political context.

Munich Mayor Dieter Reiter’s application on behalf of the council made clear that it was to protest a law passed by Hungarian lawmakers last week that prohibits sharing with minors any content portraying homosexuality or sex reassignment. The law has been denounced as anti-LGBT discrimination by human rights groups.

UEFA says it believes “that discrimination can only be fought in close collaboration with others” and that it has proposed that Munich illuminates the stadium with the rainbow colors on June 28 for Christopher Street Day or between July 3-9 for the Christopher Street Day week in the city.

England and the Czech Republic both advanced to the round of 16 at the European Championship a day before their match.

Results in other groups allowed both to be guaranteed of at least one of the four best third-place spots.

The teams will meet at Wembley Stadium in London with no pressure for advancement but with first place in Group D on the line.

Scotland or Croatia can join them in the round of 16 with a victory. They both have one point from their opening two matches and will play each other at Hampden Park in Glasgow.

Guatemala: 3 Killings of LGBT People in a Week – Human Rights Watch

(New York) – Unidentified assailants killed two transgender women and one gay man in Guatemala in separate attacks within the span of one week, including Andrea González, the leader of a trans rights organization, Human Rights Watch said today. The Attorney General’s Office should conduct prompt, thorough, and independent investigations into these cases to bring those responsible to justice.

Guatemalan civil society organizations reported that these 3 recent killings bring the total killings of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people so far in 2021 to at least 13. The Ombudsperson’s Office reported that in 2020, at least 19 people known to be LGBT were murdered in Guatemala.

“To protect LGBT people and prevent 2021 from becoming one of the deadliest years for gender and sexual minorities in Guatemala, authorities need to pursue accountability for these killings,” said Cristian González Cabrera, LGBT rights researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Investigations by the Attorney General’s Office should prioritize establishing whether the victims were targeted on the basis of their sexual orientation or gender identity or their work defending LGBT rights.”

Andrea González, killed on June 11 in Guatemala City, was the legal representative and a leader of OTRANS Queens of the Night (OTRANS Reinas de la Noche), an organization that advocates for the rights of transgender women, including with respect to sexual health, sex work, and legal gender recognition. In recent months, González had sought help from the Attorney General’s Office over threats she had been receiving. González’s killing prompted calls for investigations and expressions of solidarity with LGBT people in Guatemala from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the Swedish and United States embassies in the country.

Cecy Caricia Ixpata, also an OTRANS member, died on June 9 in the Salamá Hospital in Baja Verapaz, where she lived, from injuries sustained in an attack by two unidentified people. An OTRANS representative told Human Rights Watch that Ixpata, like González, had contacted the Attorney General’s Office in the past regarding transphobic threats.

The National Observatory of LGBTIQ+ Human Rights reported that a gay man was gunned down on June 14 in Morales, Izabal.

In March, Human Rights Watch published a report on violence and discrimination against LGBT people in Guatemala. Human Rights Watch interviewed 53 survivors of anti-LGBT abuses and found that perpetrators included public security agents, gangs, and members of the public, including the LGBT people’s own family members. It also found that the government is failing to adequately protect LGBT people against such illegal acts.

Trans people and human rights defenders may be particularly vulnerable. In February, Galilea Monroy de León, director of the transgender rights organization REDMMUTRANS, said police stopped her in the street while searching for someone accused of stealing a firearm. When Monroy asked for a female police officer to search her, an officer said, “You are a man, look at your genitals.” Shoved against a wall, Monroy told the police that she is a human rights defender. A police officer replied, “To hell with human rights.”

Guatemala provides LGBT people with virtually no protections. Guatemala has no comprehensive civil law that explicitly protects against discrimination or addresses hate crimes on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity. It also has no procedure to allow trans people to change their gender markers on official documents, leaving them vulnerable to discrimination and violence when they are required to present identification.

In addition to these legal deficiencies, lawmakers are including discriminatory provisions in new legislation. The pending Life and Family Protection Bill describes “sexual diversity” as “incompatible with the biological and genetic aspects of human beings” and defines marriage as a union between a man and a woman. It also establishes that “freedom of conscience and expression” protects people from being “obliged to accept non-heterosexual conduct or practices as normal,” a provision that could be used to justify discriminatory denial of services. Meanwhile, a bill to address hate crimes and anti-LGBT discrimination, Initiative 5674, has stalled in Congress.

One institution that has advocated for the rights of LGBT people is the Human Rights Ombudsperson’s Office. However, legislators are attempting to block funding for the office, which announced in May that it was at risk of financial collapse. Legislators have tried to remove the current mandate-holder, Jordán Rodas, from office several times, including because of his support of LGBT rights.

The Inter-American Court of Human Rights has found that the right to life enshrined in the American Convention requires governments to ensure that no one is arbitrarily deprived of their life, but also to adopt all appropriate measures to “prevent, try, and punish the deprivation of life as a consequence of criminal acts, in general, but also to prevent arbitrary executions by its own security agents.” The OAS General Assembly has called on member states to adopt public policies against discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity or expression.

The three killings took place in the week after the US vice president, Kamala Harris, visited Guatemala and urged Guatemalans not to migrate to the United States. However, Human Rights Watch found that many LGBT Guatemalans seek asylum after facing persecution on grounds of sexual orientation and gender identity. Some asylum seekers are currently unable to enter the United States as a result of misguided US asylum policies, including the Title 42 order, which authorizes immigration authorities to illegally expel migrants without providing them the opportunity to seek protection in the United States.

“Guatemala should take urgent and comprehensive steps to stop the bloodshed of its embattled LGBT communities,” González said. “Meanwhile, the United States should affirm that it will not turn its back on LGBT Guatemalans fleeing persecution due to their sexual orientation or gender identity.”

Euro 2020: Uefa declines request to light up Allianz Arena in rainbow colours – BBC Sport

External of Allianz Arena
The Allianz Arena’s entire external area and roofing can be lit up in various colours

Uefa has declined a request to light up the Allianz Arena in rainbow colours before Germany’s Euro 2020 match against Hungary on Wednesday.

Munich mayor Dieter Reiter made the request in protest against a new law in Hungary that bans the sharing of any content seen as promoting homosexuality and gender change to under-18s.

Uefa says it denied the request because of the “political context”.

It has instead proposed alternative dates for the stadium to be lit up.

In a statement, European football’s governing body said: “Uefa understands that the intention is also to send a message to promote diversity and inclusion – a cause, which Uefa has been supporting for many years – having joined forces with European clubs, national teams and their players, launching campaigns and plenty of activities all over Europe to promote the ethos that football should be open to everyone.

“And consequently, Uefa has proposed alternative dates for the illumination which align better with existing events.

“Racism, homophobia, sexism, and all forms of discrimination are a stain on our societies – and represent one of the biggest problems faced by the game today. Discriminatory behaviour has marred both matches themselves and, outside the stadiums, the online discourse around the sport we love.”

Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer will be allowed to wear his rainbow captain’s armband during the game.

Uefa has proposed to Munich to light the stadium in rainbow colours on either 28 June – the Christopher Street Liberation Day – or between 3-9 July which is the Christopher Street Day week in Munich.

Christopher Street Day is an annual LGBTQ+ celebration held annually in cities across Germany and Switzerland, held in memory of the Stonewall Riots in New York in 1969. It is the countries’ counterpart to Pride.

On Monday, the German football association (DFB) said it would also prefer any such protest to be held on a date other than Wednesday.

Last week, Hungary passed the law that would ban LGBT literature for minors, including educational material, and advertisements deemed to be promoting gay rights.

Hungary’s government does not recognise gay marriage and has a law restricting gay adoption.

Peter Szijjarto, the country’s foreign minister, who had previously said that “mixing politics and sport” was “harmful and dangerous”, has welcomed Uefa’s decision.

“The leadership of Uefa made the right decision by not assisting in a political provocation against Hungary,” he told AFP.

“Thank God common sense remains among the leaders of European football.”

Uefa’s decision comes days after it launched an investigation into “potential discriminatory incidents” during Hungary’s matches against Portugal and France.

During their opener against Portugal at Budapest’s Puskas Arena, homophobic banners were displayed by fans.

On Saturday, before the France match, fans marched to the ground with a banner telling players to stop taking a knee to protest against racism.

Germany host Hungary in their final Group F match on Wednesday (20:00 BST).

Before Carl Nassib, Michael Sam was the NFL’s first openly gay draft pick. He never played a regular season game. – The Washington Post

Sam joined training camp with the St. Louis Rams but was ultimately cut. The Dallas Cowboys added him to a practice squad, but Sam’s position there lasted only seven weeks. He went on to play briefly for the Montreal Alouettes in Canada. But he never played in a regular season game for the NFL, and in 2015, Sam retired from football, citing mental health reasons.

‘Trese’ gets hilarious dub featuring ‘bekimon’, voices of Ruffa Mae, Kris Aquino – Interaksyon

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Trese still
A still from Netflix’s animated series “Trese.” (Still provided by Netflix Philippines)

Some Filipino content creators dubbed some scenes of Netflix’s “Trese” following its successful premiere two weeks ago.

The occult anime, which was based on a Filipino comic series of the same title, was officially released in Filipino, English, Japanese and Spanish dub.

The voice actresses for the titular character “Alexandra Trese” are Liza Soberano for the main Filipino language, Shay Mitchell for the English translation and Ryoko Shiraishi for the Japanese one.

Some content creators, meanwhile, couldn’t help but create their own dubbed versions with a hilarious take.

Content creator Bern Josep Persia, popularly known as  “Bekimon,” dubbed the trailer of “Trese” in “gay lingo,” and shared the edited video on social media on June 16.

Gay speak is also called “bekimon.”

Bekimon’s “Trese” version has since earned over 84,000 views with 4,300 reactions and 2,300 shares on Facebook.

A TikTok user named Thesalonika Nobleza Mabangue also did a dubbing take on a scene from the first episode of “Trese” with a twist.

She imitated the iconic voice inflection of Ruffa Mae Quintos.

“Eto na po, Ruffa Mae as Trese pero ba’t parang nanuno talaga,” Mabangue wrote in the caption.

Her video clip had since earned more than 800,000 views on the mobile video-sharing paltform. It had also circulated across Twitter and Facebook.

@thesalonikanm##duet with @maronnecruz Eto na po, Ruffa Mae as Trese pero ba’t parang nanuno talaga. HAHAHAHAHAHA Ang hirap habulin yarn guysssh😅 ##fy ##fyp♬ original sound – Maronne Cruz

Another TikTok creator Red Malabunga, meanwhile, did his dubbing of the same scene while making a funny imitation of Kris Aquino.

“Nabaliw na naman. Not sure if Krissy or Mayor Joy,” Malabunga wrote in the post.

@redmalabunga#duet with @maronnecruz nabaliw na naman. Not sure if Krissy or Mayor Joy 😅♬ original sound – Maronne Cruz

Local social media later expressed their amusement after listening to the creative dub. They also praised the creators who made them.

“Walang natapos na linya…Funny na but then seryoso pa rin ang mukha,” one user said in reference to Mabangue’s Trese dub.

“SUPPORT LOKAL! Kung kaya i-dub sa japanese, english at spanish syempre kaya din ng gay lingo..para nga naman may diversity at equality..pero bet ko itey,” another user commented.

Professional voice-over artist Inka Magnaye also shared a “Trese” dub video last June 15.

“I did a quick ‘Trese’ dub on Tiktok! I just posted it, it’s very raw so don’t expect much lol. I really think my voice sounds too mature for the character, which is why I said I liked Liza Soberano’s voice quality for the role,” Inka said.

She previously weighed in on Soberano’s first voice acting stint in the animated series where she initially praised the young actress.

READ: Was Liza Soberano ‘monotonous’ in ‘Trese’? Voice talent Inka Magnaye weighs in

Magnaye then provided suggestions on she could improve her voice acting skills.

“She has dynamics in her delivery. However, she DOES tend to deliver her lines in almost the exact same cadence, and people confuse that with monotony,” Inka said.

UEFA declines Munich application for rainbow-colored stadium – Buffalo News

MUNICH (AP) — UEFA has declined the Munich city council’s application to have its stadium illuminated in rainbow colors for Germany’s final European Championship group game against Hungary on Wednesday.

The governing body said in a statement Tuesday that it understands the intention behind the proposal but “must decline this request” because of its political context — “a message aiming at a decision taken by the Hungarian national parliament.”

Munich Mayor Dieter Reiter’s application on behalf of the council made clear it wanted to protest a law passed by Hungarian lawmakers last week that prohibits sharing with minors any content portraying homosexuality or sex reassignment. The law was denounced as anti-LGBT discrimination by human rights groups.

Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó blasted the German plan on Monday.

“In Hungary we have passed a law to protect Hungarian children, and now in Western Europe they are griping about it,” Szijjártó said in Luxembourg. “They want to express this by including politics in a sporting event, which has nothing to do with the passing of national laws.”

UEFA said it believes “that discrimination can only be fought in close collaboration with others” and it proposed that Munich illuminates the stadium with the rainbow colors on June 28 for Christopher Street Day or between July 3-9 for the Christopher Street Day week in the city.

The body said these dates “align better with existing events.”

German soccer federation spokesman Jens Grittner had already suggested Monday that it might also be an option to display the colors in the days after Hungary’s visit. Munich will host a quarterfinal match at Euro 2020 on July 2.

But the delayed action undermines the Munich’s city’s planned protest against what it calls “the homophobic and transphobic legislation of the Hungarian government.”

Hungary’s National Assembly approved the bill against sharing LGBT content with minors in a 157-1 vote last week, when one independent lawmaker voted against it and all other opposition parties boycotted the voting session in protest.

“This legislation represents a new mark in the invisibility and disenfranchisement of lesbians, gays, bisexual, transgender and intersex people (LGBTI) and adds to the systematic restriction of the rule of law and fundamental freedoms that have been practiced for years in Hungary,” the Munich council said in its application, which had cross-party support.

UEFA said it understood the council’s intention to send a message to promote diversity and inclusion but stressed that it was “a politically and religiously neutral organization.”

Michael Roth, Germany’s minister for Europe, said UEFA’s decision was “bitter, but expected” and he called for fans attending the game to show their colors in the stadium.

“Set an example for diversity and solidarity with LGBTI people in Hungary and all over Europe! LGBTI rights are human rights!” Roth wrote on Twitter.

Bavarian governor Markus Söder also regretted UEFA’s decision.

“It would have been a very good sign of tolerance and freedom. We have to stand up against exclusion and discrimination,” Söder said in a post on Twitter.

There are plans for other stadiums, where the tournament is not being played, to be illuminated with rainbow colors during Wednesday’s game instead.

“If Munich is not allowed on Wednesday, then the other stadiums in the country will have to show their colors. Come now, league colleagues!” Eintracht Frankfurt board spokesman Axel Hellmann said on Twitter.

Cologne confirmed Tuesday morning that its stadium will also show the rainbow colors for the game “on the initiative of various groups from Cologne’s society.” The Olympic Stadium in Berlin will also display the rainbow colors during the game.

The Berliner Zeitung newspaper reported that the city’s senate was also considering illuminating the Brandenburg Gate with the colors.

Berlin Deputy Mayor Ramona Pop accused UEFA of hypocrisy.

“Always happy to be lauded for actions against homophobia and racism, but not allowing a rainbow stadium as a symbol of tolerance and diversity at Euro 2020. What a poor showing, UEFA!” Pop said.

On Sunday, UEFA gave the go-ahead for Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer to continue wearing a captain’s armband with the rainbow colors at the tournament.

“What does the rainbow stand for?” German government spokesman Steffen Seibert asked on Monday. “It stands for how we want to live: With respect for each other, without the discrimination that has long excluded minorities. And surely the vast majority of people can relate to that.”

More AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

Ciarán Fahey on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cfaheyAP

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

Vatican protests against new anti-LGBT laws in Italy – Daily Mail

The Vatican has made an ‘unprecedented’ formal diplomatic objection to a draft Italian law against homophobia, a news report said Tuesday.

The so-called Zan law, which is currently being debated in Italy‘s parliament, seeks to punish acts of discrimination and incitement to violence against gay, lesbian, transgender and disabled people.

According to the Corriere della Sera newspaper, the Vatican argued in a formal note that the bill violates the Concordat, the treaty between Italy and the Holy See.

The Vatican has made an 'unprecedented' protest against new equality laws in Italy that would force Catholic schools to participate in a new pro-LGBT public holiday (file image)

The Vatican has made an ‘unprecedented’ protest against new equality laws in Italy that would force Catholic schools to participate in a new pro-LGBT public holiday (file image)

‘It is an unprecedented act in the history of relations between the two states – or at least, there are no public precedents,’ the daily said.

Pope Francis’ de facto foreign minister, Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher, delivered a letter, or ‘note verbale’, to the Italian embassy to the Holy See on June 17.

The letter suggested that the Zan law would breach the Concordat by curtailing Catholic freedom of belief and expression.

This is because Catholic schools would not be exempted from an obligation to take part in a newly-created national day against homophobia, lesbophobia and transphobia.

The letter also expressed concern that Catholics could in the future face legal action for expressing opinions against LGBTI rights, Corriere said.

Corriere noted that even if the Holy See had ‘never before’ taken such a step against a draft Italian law, the Concordat gives it the right to do so.

Neither the Vatican nor the Italian foreign ministry responded to requests for comment on the Corriere report, published four days before Rome’s 2021 Gay Pride parade.

The Zan law was passed by the lower house of parliament in November, but its final approval is far from guaranteed as it faces stiff opposition from right-wing parties in the Senate.

The Vatican argues the new law would violate the Concordat, a treaty which governs relations between Italy and Vatican City (file image)

The Vatican argues the new law would violate the Concordat, a treaty which governs relations between Italy and Vatican City (file image)

Raiders’ Carl Nassib Is The First Active NFL Player To Come Out As Gay – NPR

NPR’s Noel King talks to Jim Buzinski of Outsports.com about defensive end Carl Nassib who came out in an Instagram post, saying he has agonized over the moment for 15 years.

NOEL KING, HOST:

When 28-year-old Carl Nassib came out on Instagram, he made history.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

CARL NASSIB: What’s up, people? I’m Carl Nassib. I’m at my house here in West Chester, Pa. I just want to take a quick moment to say that I’m gay. I’ve been meaning to do this for a while now. But I finally feel comfortable enough to get it off my chest.

KING: Nassib is a defensive end for the Las Vegas Raiders, meaning he’s still playing the game, making him the first active NFL player to come out publicly. With me now is Jim Buzinski, the co-founder of outsports.com. Good morning, Jim.

JIM BUZINSKI: Good morning.

KING: How big a deal is this?

BUZINSKI: It’s momentous. It’s the first openly gay active NFL player, and the league’s been around for more than a hundred years.

KING: What did you think of the Instagram video when you saw it? What went through your mind?

BUZINSKI: Well, I first noticed that when he first said I’m gay, a smile kind of cracked on his face, and so that told me this guy is relaxed. He’s confident. He finally got something off his chest he’s been probably wanting to say publicly forever. And it made a huge statement. I think the fact that he used his social media was a way to do it unfiltered. There wasn’t a publicist. There wasn’t a coordinated media campaign. He just looked like he was in his backyard recording, you know, a video for his friends. And so I thought that that really gave it really power.

KING: What’s been the response so far from maybe the most important people in his professional life, his coaches and his teammates?

BUZINSKI: It’s been overwhelmingly positive. The owner of the team, Mark Davis, said he did not know initially that Carl was gay, but also because of COVID, the owner hadn’t been around the team as much last year. But the – his teammates and coaches had already known because he actually credited them with helping him come out by their acceptance. And they were nothing but positive. So that’s another really great thing about it. He’s an established player, and so it’s not a matter of, is he going to be drafted, like we had with Michael Sam in 2014. He’s on the team. He’s had 20 1/2 sacks in his NFL career, which is pretty good. And so the acceptance has been overwhelming and universal, including from the commissioner, Roger Goodell.

KING: And I imagine you’ve been keeping an eye as well on what fans are saying about this. What’s the reaction in the community of people who are fans of the Raiders and of this guy?

BUZINSKI: It’s been overwhelmingly positive. The few negatives have been kind of drowned out by people saying, congratulations, you’re living your own truth. They’re excited. I know a bisexual high school football player who’s actually going to be telling his coming-out story on Outsports. And he’s a big Denver Broncos fan, who are the – a big enemy of the Raiders, and now – he even cheered it on.

KING: (Laughter).

BUZINSKI: So the reaction has just been just fantastic. And I think it shows that society is ready for this.

KING: And you alluded to this – Carl Nassib may be the first active player to come out, but there have been other gay players in the NFL before, right? They’ve just usually announced it after they’ve retired.

BUZINSKI: Correct. There have been 15 that have either been in a training camp or on an NFL roster, but none of them were out while they played, except for Michael Sam, who came out prior to the draft in 2014. But he never made the team, so he never played, actually, in an NFL game. So the first person to come out was David Kopay, who was a nine-year veteran with several teams. He came out in 1975, a year after retiring. And I talked to him today. He still lives in Southern California. He was just ecstatic that, you know, basically, why did it take so long?

But the fact is that these guys were trailblazers. But Carl will be the first person you’ll be able to watch on television during a game and say, hey, that player is gay. And that means so much to, you know, every young LGBTQ athlete, whether they play football or another sport, who can now say, I can do this; you know, if he can do it, I can do it. Sports are more accepting. Even though there are certainly a lot of problems still with homophobia in sports, we’ve come a long way. And the reaction to Carl coming out kind of shows that. It’s – in many ways, it’s going to be, like, a one- or two-day story because there’s not much more to say about it. He’s gay, so what are you going to do with that other than applaud him?

KING: Jim Buzinski, the co-founder of outsports.com. Thank you for taking the time today, Jim. We really appreciate it.

BUZINSKI: Well, thank you so much.

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Roughly 30% of Latin Mormons in the United States identify as LGBT – Sunday Vision


More than a quarter of Latinos in the United States affiliated with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or Mormons, identify as belonging to the LGBTQ community, a proportion that is higher than that of LGBTQ Latinos in the general population. a study.

The survey, published by Religion News Services on Monday, was conducted by the Nationscape Data Set, a joint initiative of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and the Democracy Fund.

The study involved interviews with about 318,000 residents of the country, including about 3,800 members of the Mormon Church, to determine the demographic and generational characteristics of that religious group.

One of the “surprising” findings, said the survey’s authors (Chris Tozanovic and Lyn Favrick, UCLA political scientists) is that among Mormons, “ethnic minorities tend to be sexual minorities as well.”

Specifically, while 13% of all Hispanics in the United States declare themselves LGBTQ, this percentage among Hispanic Mormons is as high as 29%. The study explains that this statistical difference is “significant” because, given the number of people surveyed, “it is not an error due to random sampling.”


However, “It is not clear why Hispanic Mormons show greater sexual diversity than their non-Mormons counterparts,” the report notes, adding that a similar phenomenon has been detected among African Americans, with 26% of Mormons identifying as LGBTQ.

Additionally, regardless of race, the majority of gay Mormons live outside of Utah, the state in which the church is located and where the majority of the population is conservative.

According to the study authors, this situation was first discovered in 2016 and since then the number of non-heterosexual Mormons outside Utah has continued to grow, due to a “decision on their part” possibly based on the fact that “Utah is the most problematic place for women. Sexual minorities, At least outside of Salt Lake City.”

In terms of age, among Mormons called Generation Z (born after 1997), 23% identify as LGBTQ, compared to just 6% of those born between 1946 and 1965, or “boomers.”


Hungary’s new LGBT law contradicts EU values, Germany says – Reuters

German Minister of State for Europe, Michael Roth gestures as he speaks at the start of the European affairs ministers meeting in Brussels, Belgium, May 11, 2021. Olivier Hoslet/Pool via REUTERS

June 22 (Reuters) – Hungary’s new law banning the “display and promotion of homosexuality” among under-18s clearly violates European Union values, Germany said on Tuesday.

“The European Union is not primarily a single market or a currency union. We are a community of values, these values bind us all,” German Europe Minister Michael Roth told reporters ahead of a meeting with his EU counterparts in Luxembourg.

“There should be absolutely no doubt that minorities, sexual minorities too, must be treated respectfully.”

Reporting by Sabine Siebold in Berlin; Editing by Alex Richardson

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Can we be friends? Dating apps say sex isn’t everything in a post-pandemic world – Reuters

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June 22 (Reuters) – I’ve just come out of a long-term lockdown. Can we be friends?

Amorous entanglements aren’t uppermost in the minds of many people emerging from long periods of pandemic isolation. Instead, they crave the friendships and social groups they have been starved of over the past year.

That’s the verdict of dating apps such as Tinder and Bumble (BMBL.O), which are launching or acquiring new services focused entirely on making and maintaining friends.

“There’s a really interesting trend that has been taking place in the connection space, which is this desire to have platonic relationships,” said Bumble founder and CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd.

“People are seeking friendship in ways they would have only done offline before the pandemic.”

Her company is investing in its Bumble BFF (best friends forever) feature, which it said comprised about 9% of Bumble’s total monthly active users in September 2020 and “has room to grow as we increase our focus on this space”.

Meanwhile its archrival Match Group (MTCH.O) – owner of a string of apps including Tinder and Hinge – is also pushing beyond love and lust. It paid $1.7 billion this year for South Korean social media firm Hyperconnect, whose apps let people chat from across the world using real-time translation.

Hyperconnect’s revenue jumped 50% last year, while Meetup, which helps you meet people with similar interests at local or online events, has seen a 22% rise in new members since January.

Meetup’s most searched word this year was “friends”.

‘FRIENDS FOR MORE THAN A YEAR’

Such friendship services have experienced increased engagement from users since COVID-19 restrictions have gradually been lifted around the world, allowing people to meet in person, according to Evercore analyst Shweta Kharjuria, who said that it made sound business sense to court more customers.

“This opens up the total available market from targeting only singles to singles and married people,” she said.

The importance of physical contact was echoed by Amos, a 22-year-old French au pair using Bumble BFF in London.

“Getting the momentum going is hard online and if everything IRL (in real life) is closed,” he said. “You never really connect until you meet in person.”

Rosie, a 24-year-old dental nurse living in the city of Bristol in southwestern England, struggled to connect with her older co-workers during lockdown and began using Bumble BFF three weeks ago to meet new people.

“I’m a very sociable person and like meeting new people, but never found the opportunities. I’ve gone from having just Vodafone texting me to this app buzzing quite a bit, which is nice, it seems a lot of girls are in my position.”

Nupur, a 25-year-old teacher from the city of Pune in western India who uses both Tinder and Bumble, said the apps’ efforts to promote themselves as a way of finding friends rather than just hook-ups and love “could work very well”.

“I’ve met a couple of people online and we’ve met up and have been friends for more than a year now.”

Indeed friend-making networks such as MeetMe and Yubo have even outstripped some popular dating apps in terms of daily engagement over the past few months, according to market research firm Apptopia.

Jess Carbino, an online dating expert and former sociologist for Tinder and Bumble, told Reuters that social isolation had been “staggering” due to the pandemic, particularly for single people living alone.

“(This) has inspired people to use the tools available to them, namely technology, to find companionship and connection.”

Click here for an interactive graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/35rB9NO

‘TRENDS ARE HERE TO STAY’

LGBTQ+ dating apps have done a lot to push the social aspect of dating, according to brokerage Canaccord Genuity, with China’s Blued offers surrogacy services, for example, and Taimi providing livestreaming.

Gay dating app Hornet, meanwhile, aims to be more of a social network focused on users’ personal interests, rather than solely a hook-up service centred on physical looks and proximity.

Hornet’s founder and CEO Christof Wittig said it was unlikely that people would revert to the “old ways” of connecting with their community exclusively offline, such as through nightlife, activism or LGBTQ sport events.

Witting said the number of users tapping the newsfeed, comments and videos rose 37% in the year to May.

He said the number of people looking for friendship and community online had increased during lockdowns when people turned to digital platforms for a sense of belonging when bars, gyms and pride events were shuttered.

“These trends are here to stay,” he added. “Just like video conferencing and telecommuting.”

Reporting by Aniruddha Ghosh and Subrat Patnaik in Bengaluru and Sarah Morland in Gdansk; Editing by Bernard Orr and Pravin Char

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.