Archive for December 29th, 2011

Palmarès top/10 de Gay Globe Média 2011!

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

Par Gay Globe Média

Gay Globe Média annonce son palmarès des meilleurs et des pires événements et coups posés au nom ou impliquant la commuanuté gay internationale en 2011 et pour commencer, voici les 5 meilleurs coups:

1- Reconnaissance par certains tribunaux canadiens du concept de non criminalisation du VIH conditionnellement à un traitement par trithérapie et une charge virale indétectable, assurant ainsi aux personnes séropositives qu’elles ne pourront être accusées criminellement de transmission si elles décident de ne pas divulguer leur statut sérologique;

2- Découverte du premier vaccin contre le VIH efficace au Canada et lancement de la phase I chez les humains;

3- Le Premier Ministre du Royaume-Uni, David Cameron, annonce qu’il coupera l’aide accordée aux pays qui ne mettront pas un terme à la criminalisation de l’homosexualité. Il rend l’aide financière de la Grande-Bretagne conditionnelle au respect de droits fondamentaux pour les personnes homosexuelles;

4- Brad Pitt, acteur américain, annonce qu’il ne se mariera que le jour où les homosexuels auront ce même droit aux États-Unis;

5- Le Spécial Doris Day de Gay Globe Média, magazine et TV, édition 79, bat tous les records depuis les débuts du magazine en multipliant par 4 le taux de lecture.

Gay Globe Média annonce son palmarès des meilleurs et des pires événements et coups posés au nom ou impliquant la commuanuté gay internationale en 2011 et voici les 5 pires coups, les plus honteux nous concernant collectivement:

1- Robert Rousseau, directeur général de Rézo (Séro-Zéro), groupe de prévention du SIDA montréalais subventionné avec l’argent du public qui déclarait sous serment dans un procès criminel contre une personne accusée de vouloir transmettre volontairement le SIDA aux gais dans un sauna et reconnu coupable depuis, que les hommes gais allaient dans les saunas montréalais volontairement pour contracter le VIH, que les propriétaires de ces saunas avaient conscience de ça, qu’il acceptaient ce fait, soulevant chez le juge et dans la communauté une vaste réaction de colère allant jusqu’à demander la démission de Rousseau. Le témoignage de Rousseau ayant été totalement refusé par le juge qui a aussi refusé de lui donner le titre d’expert!;

2- Jasmin Roy, Président de la Fondation du même nom qui prétend vouloir contrer l’homophobie et l’intimidation chez les gais refuse toute entrevue aux médias gais et journalistes gais, méprisant ainsi ceux-là même qu’il prétend représenter;

3- Réal Ménard, ex-député gai du Bloc Québécois dans Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, qui après plus de 16 ans comme responsable élu du comté le plus pauvre du Canada le quitte sans avoir réussi un seul projet de développement, décide de se présenter comme conseiller municipal du même quartier à la Ville de Montréal et n’arrive pas plus à sortir le district sous sa responsabilité de la misère sociale dont il est atteint. Il incarne l’exemple parfait selon nous de l’incompétence totale de certains élus gais qui se servent de la cause pour conserver un poste qu’ils ne méritent pas;

4- Le Pape Benoît XVI pour l’ensemble de son oeuvre. Depuis sa tendre enfance comme membre des Jeunesses Hitlétiennes, organisation paramilitaire des nazis en Allemagne (déportations et exécutions des homosexuels sous Hitler) jusqu’à son titre de Pape, persécutant les homosexuels jusque dans leur âme alors qu’il est le chef de la plus grande confrérie de pédophiles au monde, qu’il refuse l’avortement des femmes victimes de viol et qu’il condamne le port du condom dans les pays avec 40% de SIDA;

5- Télétoon qui diffusait un épisode des Simpsons avec une traduction québécoise qui utilisait le mot “fif” alors qu’il est convenu par tous au Québec depuis 20 ans que ce mot est dérogatoire et qu’il est associé à la violence faite aux homosexuels. La porte-parole de Télétoon se contentant de regretter le mot tout en essayant de mitiger son impact en déclarant qu’il n’avait pas de signification négative pour elle, niant le mauvais exemple que pouvait causer ce geste chez les jeunes auditeurs des Simpsons;

HIV testing kits recalled over accuracy fears

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

Business daily
More than one million HIV testing kits have been recalled following a global alert by the World Health Organisation over their accuracy.

The Public Health and Sanitation ministry has said the Standard Diagnostic Bioline, one of the three kits used for HIV testing in the country, had diagnosed patients as HIV negative when they were positive.

“Following the World Health Organisation (WHO) global alert, the Government of Kenya has instituted an immediate recall of all Bioline rapid test kits supplies from all health facilities and VCTs in the country,” said the National Aids and STI Control Programme (Nascop).

The Public Health ministry directed provincial directors and Aids and sexually transmitted diseases sector co-ordinators to remove the kits from health facilities. The Director of Public Health and Sanitation, Shanaz Sharif, said Bioline rapid test kits constituted about a tenth of the tools in circulation which he estimated at 10 million units.

WHO issued the directive following increased cases of discrepancies in results from the testing kits. The kit is manufactured by Standard Diagnostic Inc, a South Korean medical equipment maker. The recall suggests failure on the part of government laboratories which conduct quality tests on equipment and approve use. Medical practitioners use three test kits to check the presence of the HIV virus in a patient. The first test, called screening test, is performed using the Determine kit, which detects if someone is HIV positive.

Bioline is used to detect HIV negative blood samples. In cases where the two don’t give consistent results, the Unigold test is used as a tie breaker.

Following the anomaly, the government has replaced the Bioline kit with Unigold for confirmatory tests.

The Long Elisa method will be used as a tie breaker in cases of discrepancies, with Determine being used for screening. “Unigold will replace Bioline as the confirmatory HIV test kit,” said Dr Sharif.

In cases of discrepancies, HIV testing and counselling service providers will now have to send dried blood samples to the National HIV Reference Laboratory by courier service for determination of final test results.

Officials at Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kemri), however, said that Bioline was not widely used. “About seven per cent of Kenyans coming for HIV tests are positive. Given that Bioline is used to detect negative status, there are less of the Bioline kits out there,” said Dr Matilu Mwau, a paediatrician with Kemri.

HIV positive man claims he had sex with thousands of people

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

WWMT
KENT COUNTY, Mich. (NEWSCHANNEL 3) – Health officials in Kent County are still trying to track down any possible victims of a man who was trying to spread HIV.

David Smith told detectives he had sex with “thousands” of people without telling them he had the virus.

While investigators doubt that number is accurate, a new alleged victim did come forward yesterday.

The second victim in this case is identified only as Jane Doe. She will remain anonymous, as will any other victims who come forward.

Yesterday Smith was arraigned on a second charge of trying to spread AIDS to an uninformed partner.

Investigators believe Smith has some mental health issues, but they also say he knew exactly what he was doing by seeking multiple sex partners for the purpose of spreading the virus.

Smith’s bond has been raised to $100,000, meaning he’ll likely remain behind bars.

Police say anyone who had contact with Smith should call them immediately, then head to the health department for testing.

2011 International LGBT Roundup: Decriminalization of Homosexuality and Anti-Discrimination

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

Care2
2011 International LGBT Roundup: Decriminalization of Homosexuality and Anti-Discrimination

by Paul Canning
December 28, 2011
9:00 pm

4 comments 2011 International LGBT Roundup: Decriminalization of Homosexuality and Anti-Discrimination

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I’m rounding up the year in a series of posts — in which no doubt I’ve missed something, so please let me know what I’ve missed in the comments!

Decriminalization of homosexuality and anti-discrimination

In 2011, we saw an increased impact in 2011 of the work of the UN Human Rights Council, particularly its Universal Periodic Review (UPR) process of interrogating country’s human rights records, and other long term work by activists starting to bear fruit in other parts of the United Nations and other international bodies as well.

The passage of a resolution against killings of LGBT at the end of last year, reversing an attempt by the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) and some African countries at halting LGBT progress in international bodies, sparked a global reaction, including demonstrations and novel contact with governments by local LGBT.

This year marked the change in approach by Rwanda in particular, which had previously backed off criminalization, with its UN ambassador drawing on the country’s experience of genocide to send a message to those claiming that LGBT is not defined or that LGBT people don’t even exist.

It marked the first sign of historic change in Cuba, which appears likely to culminate in same-sex unions and anti-discrimination laws agreed to by the Communist Party next year. The way that other Caribbean countries changed positively on the UN vote on killings also marked a development which continued in several island nations during 2011.

A change of approach by South Africa on the international LGBT rights front, due to internal civil society pressure, led to them proposing the historic July resolution affirming LGBT rights at the Human Rights Council, which then led to the publication of the first UN report on LGBT human rights in December. That July resolution also caused further ripples, including the first public affirmation of LGBT rights by a Gulf civil society group, in Bahrain.

It emerged that the organized backlash against LGBT rights in international bodies, led by the OIC, Russia and the African group, was receiving support from American Christian fundamentalist bodies such as CFAM. The same people who are losing the ‘culture war’ at home have shifted to intervening in Africa and the Caribbean and various countries repeated their arguments/lies, such as Uganda claiming at the UN Human Rights Council that lesbians and gays ‘recruit’.

However, it was also clear from investigative reporting at UN HQ that many of the no-shows, abstentions or yes votes of various countries during key UN LGBT rights votes was largely down to US diplomatic pressure. This showed how both US and European pressures on LGBT rights is already happening, and working, in a year which saw extensive simplified and often inaccurate reporting on the use of such ‘leverage’, like the supposed ‘colonialist’ tying of development aid to LGBT rights.

Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/2011-international-lgbt-roundup-decriminalization-of-homosexuality-and-anti-discrimination.html#ixzz1hw2hwAiC
Four countries committed themselves to decriminalization: São Tomé and Príncipe, Nauru, The Seychelles and Northern Cyprus.

In Botswana, LGBT people launched, then put on hold, a legal push for decriminalization, and in Belize LGBT people started their legal challenge to criminalization on constitutional grounds. Jamaican law is to be challenged at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) and the opposition leader called for a review of the buggery law.

In Chile, all anti-gay discrimination was banned. Colombia passed an anti-discrimination law which includes prison terms. In South Africa, government action began on so-called ‘corrective rape‘, following massive international attention. But in Brazil, passage of a hate crimes law failed due to increased evangelical Christian influence in that country. And in Malawi, the government criminalized lesbians and used LGBT rights as a wedge issue against its opponents.

The anti-criminalization effort at the Commonwealth Summit failed but it did raise the issue widely in media worldwide.

Several former African leaders came out for decriminalization. In her fantastic speech on gay rights at the UN in December, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pointedly mentioned one, former Botswana leader Festus Mogue. But only the Zimbabwean leader Morgan Tsvangarai offered support for LGBTs amongst current African leaders.

Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/2011-international-lgbt-roundup-decriminalization-of-homosexuality-and-anti-discrimination.html#ixzz1hw2lTfqt

Homosexuals Support Gay Soldier in Treason Trial

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

Right Side News
Homosexual Army soldier Bradley Manning’s bizarre behavior, which included calling himself “Breanna” and dressing in women’s clothes, might be expected to lead some in the media to question whether Congress should have repealed the policy banning open homosexuality in the military. Instead, however, many stories about Manning’s preliminary hearing are focusing on charges from his attorneys that his confusion about his own “gender identity” means that he is somehow the victim.
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“Soldier’s gender identity issues are raised in WikiLeaks case” was the headline over a Washington Post article.

But one homosexual website is worried about these stories and headlines. “This could play out very poorly in the court of public opinion: Just as we’ve closed the door on Don’t Ask Don’t Tell and are getting Americans to see gays and lesbians can serve proudly in the Armed Forces, we have someone at the center of the biggest security leak in U.S. history claiming his gender confusion and sexuality factored into his rationale for putting national interests at risk,” it said.

President Obama had promised during the 2008 campaign to repeal the anti-homosexual policy and in office has championed the appointments of homosexual and “transgendered” people to high-level federal positions. Obama’s proposed repeal was vigorously supported by media personalities such as MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow, a lesbian activist.

In another major embarrassment to the homosexual cause, homosexual activist Dan Choi, who has also appeared on the Rachel Maddow show, is actively supporting Manning. Discharged from the Army for publicly announcing his own homosexuality, Choi calls Manning “an excellent solider” and said at a demonstration in support of him that “We see the situation where our comrade is in shackles and chains, he is on trial. But I remind all of us gathered here today because Bradley Manning stood up for the truth, he is the most free among all of us. He is not the one on trial, the United States of America is on trial today. Our reputation, and what our country stands for.”

Choi, treated as a hero by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, had given Reid his West Point graduation ring in July of 2000 at a meeting of liberal activists and asked the senator to keep it until the military’s homosexual exclusion policy was repealed. Reid then gave the ring back in celebration of the repeal. “Choi joined Reid on stage and gave the majority leader a hug,” one report said. “The next time I get a ring from a man,” Choi tweeted later, “I expect it to be for full, equal, American marriage.”

Reid himself posted the photo of him giving Choi his ring back.

But when it appeared that Reid wouldn’t be able to pass a repeal of the homosexual exclusion policy, Choi had ripped Reid, saying, “Harry Reid is a pussy and he’ll be bleeding once a month.” He later apologized for the comments.

Asked why the major gay rights groups are not supporting Manning, Choi told Accuracy in Media that “their strategy focuses on getting politicians to like us, and re-elect those politicians who pretend to like us every election cycle. National lobby groups do not want to upset President Obama, who has already pronounced the soldier’s guilt without trial. This hero, PFC Manning, told the truth despite the consequences, and valued integrity over rank. I hope the gay groups realize that is the core tenet of our community and movement.”

The truth, according to the government, is that Manning aided enemies of the United States. However, Manning’s attorney, David E. Coombs, has argued that the information that Manning provided to WikiLeaks, founded by Julian Assange, should not have been classified in the first place and that it didn’t hurt U.S. national security.

Assange has reportedly pledged a “significant amount” towards Manning’s legal expenses and the Bradley Manning Support Network is also helping to pay for his defense. Its advisory board includes Medea Benjamin of Code Pink, leftist filmmaker Michael Moore, and Kathleen Gilberd, Co-Chair of the Military Law Task Force of the National Lawyers Guild (NLG), a legal group once designated by the U.S. Government as a Communist Party front. Gilberd co-authored Rules of Disengagement: The Politics and Honor of Military Dissent, which argues that U.S. military personnel should disobey orders and refuse to participate in “illegal wars” such as Iraq and Afghanistan.

The Bradley Manning Support Network is asking that funds for his defense be funneled to “Courage to Resist,” a group which supports “the troops who refuse to fight” in U.S. wars. It also sells a book by the title of Army of None.

Manning had been an Army intelligence analyst in Iraq. At the time of the posting of the information, Admiral Mike Mullen, then-chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said, “Mr. Assange can say whatever he likes about the greater good he thinks he and his source are doing, but the truth is they might already have on their hands the blood of some young soldier or that of an Afghan family.”

Then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates said, “The battlefield consequences of the release of these documents are potentially severe and dangerous for our troops, our allies and Afghan partners, and may well damage our relationships and reputation in that key part of the world. Intelligence sources and methods, as well as military tactics, techniques and procedures will become known to our adversaries.”

The Obama Justice Department is reportedly investigating WikiLeaks, but no charges have been filed. Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, wants Assange prosecuted under the Espionage Act of 1917.

The charges in this case, United States Army v. Bradley Manning, include knowingly giving intelligence to the enemy, through the “indirect means” of WikiLeaks. The charge can carry the death penalty, but Army prosecutors have said they are not seeking that punishment.

Philip Cave, a retired Navy judge advocate, says the charges against Manning constitute the Army equivalent of the Walker spy scandal involving father and son which became known as “The Navy’s Biggest Betrayal.” The Walkers stole classified U.S. Navy documents and provided them to the Soviet KGB.

Cave tells AIM it is a foregone conclusion that Manning will face a full-blown court-martial because the government has made a convincing case that Manning violated regulations against release of classified information. He thinks Manning’s lawyers may opt for a plea deal.

The hearing for PFC Manning began on December 16, 2011 at Fort Meade, Maryland, and is designed to outline the nature of the case to be presented by the government in a court-martial.

Although President Obama has said that Manning had “broken the law,” the lack of enforcement of the military’s homosexual exclusion policy, which was then in effect, could have opened the door to Manning’s alleged law-breaking and treason.

Indeed, despite the policy against public expressions of homosexuality in the military, it appears that the Manning case is an example of how it was not enforced by the Obama Administration. Manning had been a homosexual activist, had marched in gay rights parades, and had flaunted his homosexuality on Facebook. Manning, on his Facebook page, had listed the National Center for Transgender Equality, National Public Radio, “1,000,000 strong for Daniel Choi,” Rachel Maddow’s MSNBC television show, The Daily Show, Anderson Cooper 360, Virginia Young Democrats, Media Matters for America, and Barack Obama as being among his “likes.”

It has been speculated that Manning’s idea of downloading and releasing classified information to WikiLeaks may have been his way at getting back at the United States military over its policy regarding homosexuality. He was arrested in May of 2010.

What remains to be determined is whether he was part of a secret homosexual network working with WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange, once part of a group called the “International Subversives,” and whether Manning was blackmailed into obtaining and disclosing the information.

A 1950 congressional report, “Employment of Homosexuals and Other Sex Perverts in Government,” declared, “It is an accepted fact among intelligence agencies that espionage organizations the world over consider sex perverts who are in possession of or have access to confidential material to be prime targets where pressure can be exerted.”

Assange, a native of Australia with an anti-American and anti-military bent, has a criminal record for illegal computer hacking. He is himself under investigation and facing deportation from Britain for alleged sex crimes.

With lawyers for Manning insisting that he had “gender identity” problems, it is significant that Rowan Scarborough of The Washington Times reports that “the gay rights movement’s next battleground is to persuade the Obama administration to end the armed forces’ ban on ‘transgenders,’ a group that includes transsexuals and cross-dressers.”

The paper quoted Vincent Paolo Villano, spokesman for the 6,000-member Center for Transgender Equality, as saying, “Our position is that the military should re-examine the policy, the medical regulations, so as to allow open service for transgender people.” The Times added that the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, which pushed to end the military’s gay ban, is urging President Obama to sign an executive order prohibiting discrimination based on “gender identity.”

The National Center for Transgender Equality (NCTE), which received $50,000 from the Soros-funded Open Society Institute in 2007, has issued a statement that “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” was “a discriminatory law and it needed to go” but that transgender servicemembers “continue serving in silence” and that crossdressers should be able to serve openly in the U.S. Armed Forces.

Phillip Kayser, Ron Paul Endorser, Called For Executing Homosexuals Under ‘Biblical Law’

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

Huffingtonpost
UPDATE: The endorsement no longer appears on Paul’s website, according to TPM. Here is a screenshot of the endorsement via blogger Doug Mataconis.

PREVIOUSLY:

Ron Paul’s campaign is touting the endorsement of Phillip G. Kayser, an Iowa pastor who believes in imposing the death penalty on homosexuals, reports Talking Points Memo.

“We welcome Rev. Kayser’s endorsement and the enlightening statements he makes on how Ron Paul’s approach to government is consistent with Christian beliefs,” said Paul’s Iowa chairman, Drew Ivers, in a recent press release on Paul’s campaign website.

“Difficulty in implementing Biblical law does not make non-Biblical penology just,” wrote Kayser in a recent pamphlet. “But as we have seen, while many homosexuals would be executed, the threat of capital punishment can be restorative.” Kayser added that homosexuals could be prosecuted only after the law was enacted.

TPM adds that Paul’s Iowa state director, Mike Heath, led the Christian Civic League of Maine. In that position, he called on his supporters in 2004 to email him with information on the sexual orientation of the state’s political leaders.

Paul has had one of the more pro-gay rights records among Republicans in Congress. He voted against the Federal Marriage Amendment and for the repeal of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy barring gays and lesbians from serving openly in the military. However, he still supports the Defense of Marriage Act, which bars the federal government from recognizing same-sex marriages and allows states not to recognize other states’ same-sex marriages. “Like the majority of Iowans, I believe that marriage is between one man and one woman and must be protected,” he said in February.

Eric Dondero, a former senior aide to Paul, recently explained Paul’s stance on gay rights in light of racist and homophobic newsletters written under his name in the 1980s and 90s that have resurfaced. “He is not all bigoted towards homosexuals. He supports their rights to do whatever they please in their private lives,” he wrote. “He is however, personally uncomfortable around homosexuals, no different from a lot of older folks of his era.”

Gay rights activist and author Dan Savage recently defended Paul. “And Ron may not like gay people, and may not want to hang out with us or use our toilets, but he’s content to leave us the f*** alone and recognizes that gay citizens are entitled to the same rights as all other citizens,” he said in Slate. “[Rick] Santorum, on the other hand, believes that his bigotry must be given the force of law. That’s an important difference.”

Ron Paul team says accuser claiming Congressman had homosexual aversion is ”not credible”

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

Metroweekly
‘Eric Dondero is a disgruntled former staffer who was fired for performance issues…. He has zero credibility and should not be taken seriously.”

Quote received by CBS News from Ron Paul’s spokesman Jesse Benton. He was responding to claims made by Eric Dondero, a former aide to the Congressman and Republican Presidential candidate.

Dondero wrote a statement for RightWingNews.com alleging that Paul is “out of touch, with both Hispanic and Black culture”, “most certainly Anti-Israel” and “personally uncomfortable around homosexuals.”

In the piece, Dondero said that Ron Paul (who is also a doctor) met with a gay Libertarian supporter in San Francisco in the late 1980s. He claimed Paul would not use the man’s bathroom:

”Ron pulled me aside the first time we went there, and specifically instructed me to find an excuse to excuse him to a local fast food restaurant so that he could use the bathroom. He told me very clearly, that although he liked Jim, he did not wish to use his bathroom facilities.”

He also relayed a second-hand story about another “flamboyant” gay supporter who was refused a handshake by Paul:

”Ron likes Bobby personally…. But after his speech… Bobby came up to Ron with his hand extended, and according to my fellow staffer, Ron literally swatted his hand away.”

Paul is a Republican from Texas. He is believed by many to be a libertarian on many issues because he argues that most Federal services and regulations are unconstitutional. His thoughts about removing government from people’s personal lives is not necessarily supported by his record, though. According to OnTheIssues.org, Paul voted against allowing gay adoptions in Washington, D.C.; supported “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell;” and said that the “Defense of Marriage Act” was “proper.” Paul has not, however, supported a Constitutional Amendment to define marriage, primarily because he thinks marriage is a religious function that should be separate from government. He has more recently stated that he thinks marriage should only be between a man and a woman. And, in 2010, Paul changed his stance on military service: He voted to repeal DADT, saying discharges of trained and skilled personnel was “an awful waste” and made “no financial sense.”

TalkingPointsMemo.com has been tracking a connection between Ron Paul’s Iowa Campaign and a preacher named Phillip G. Kayser. The site says Kayser wants to implement “Biblical punishments for homosexuals” including the death penalty. TPM reports today that a published acceptance of Kayser’s endorsement of candidate Paul has been removed from the RonPaul2012.com website. A cached copy from Google indicates that the statement read in part:

“We welcome Rev. Kayser’s endorsement and the enlightening statements he makes on how Ron Paul’s approach to government is consistent with Christian beliefs. We’re thankful for the thoughtfulness with which he makes his endorsement and hope his endorsement and others like it make a strong top-three showing in the caucus more likely.”