Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Gay News Magazine Headlines (T24T-2)

News:

About a dozen people from the D.C. and Maryland LGBT community picketed outside the concert of the Mexican rock band Molotov Monday night as part of a protest against what they say are homophobic, anti-gay lyrics in the group's songs.

The picketers in front of the concert venue, The Fillmore Silver Spring, included members of Equality Maryland, the D.C.-based service center Casa Ruby and the Latino GLBT History Project. Others at the picket included Dr. Dana Beyer, executive director of Gender Rights Maryland, and David Moon of the Maryland Juice blog.

LGBT activists hold up signs protesting violent anti-gay lyrics of the Mexican rock band Molotov outside the band's concert Monday night at the Fillmore Silver Spring.

LGBT activists hold up signs protesting violent anti-gay lyrics of the Mexican rock band Molotov outside the band's concert Monday night at the Fillmore Silver Spring.

(Photo by John Riley)

The group held signs reading, ''Words Matter/Las Palabras Importan,'' to protest lyrics that the band has used, particularly those in the song ''Puto.'' The lyrics of that song include the phrase matarile al maricon, or ''kill the faggot.'' But the band and its fans have defended the lyrics, noting that the song is primarily about political corruption and government officials who seek to infringe on people's freedoms. LGBT activists, on the other hand, say the term maricon is used in a negative context and that the ''Puto'' lyrics were allegedly screamed in June in Chile during an attack on a gay teen, Esteban Navarro, who had to have his leg amputated after being attacked by six people wielding machetes, knives and iron bars, according to Terra Online.

Following the attack on Navarro, Molotov released a statement saying the band did not intend for its lyrics to be used to incite violence against the LGBT community. The band also promised to stop using the word maricon on its U.S. tour.

The activists, however, counter that it's not enough to stop using the offensive lyrics in the United States. Throughout the demonstration, the LGBT picketers handed out fliers explaining to concertgoers that they were trying to encourage both the band and its fans to refrain from using homophobic or derogatory language.

''We want concertgoers to be aware that words matter,'' Evan Glass, a member of Equality Maryland's board of directors, told Metro Weekly. ''Molotov has some violently homophobic lyrics in its songs, and these words are very hurtful to the LGBT community. … They have the right to perform here, but we just want to educate concertgoers about the words that the band uses, and we are urging the band to stop using these words wherever they perform.''

Most concert attendees accepted and read the fliers, but many others expressed disagreement and defended the band's use of lyrics as a form of artistic expression and protest against government corruption.

Molotov

Molotov

(Photo by via Wikipedia)

''I respect their right to voice what they feel, but I think it's a little biased, because the song was written over 10 years ago, and our realities were different,'' Ellen Flores, a concertgoer and local blogger at The Incognito Latina, said of the protesters. ''Matarile al maricon, yes, maricon does mean 'fag,' but that's one of the many definitions it has. For me, my frustration is there are such things as context clues, which they teach us when we learn English, that, when you read a word, you have to read what's around it to understand it. Just because it says puto and matarile al maricon doesn't mean 'fag' or hate crimes against the homosexual community.''

''We have so many struggles, and, pardon my words, but there's so much bullshit going on in our countries, there's so much corruption, and that song is a way for us to vent,'' Flores continued. ''It happens to be that maricon is how they said it, so be it. But it's not toward the gay community. It's toward the political parties and all the corruption.''

Protester Travis Ballie said that even though some of the concertgoers vehemently disagreed with him, he found them ''very respectful'' and aware of the controversy over Molotov's lyrics. He said that some even told him they were allies of the LGBT community. Ballie's argument to several concertgoers that they deserved a band that would not use such homophobic lyrics in its songs.

Besides making the case for why the lyrics should be dropped or changed, Ballie also pushed back against those who would claim the picketers were trying to infringe upon Molotov's free-speech rights.

''I'll say that these lyrics make me feel unsafe in my own neighborhood,'' he said. ''These lyrics are similar to many different names I've been called when walking down the street. Regardless of what they think those lyrics mean, I know what they mean when they are called out to me, whether I was in Mexico City for a trip or I was right here in D.C.''

''Molotov has a constitutional right to be here and perform here,'' Ballie continued. ''I have a constitutional right to question The Fillmore's judgment in booking this band. I have a right to question the wisdom of the band to use lyrics that are violently homophobic by many accounts. I'm here to speak out against the band, and they're still able to perform, but their use of the language doesn't insulate them from the reaction it gets, and it doesn't insulate them from the effect their lyrics have.''

Dana Byer, Ruby Corado (center) and other LGBT activists protest Molotov at the Fillmore Silver Spring.

Dana Byer, Ruby Corado (center) and other LGBT activists protest Molotov at the Fillmore Silver Spring.

(Photo by John Riley)

Staff members of The Fillmore Silver Spring were very accommodating to the picketers, providing them bottles of water, though the venue avoided taking a side in the controversy.

''The Fillmore Silver Spring presents a wide variety of music, comedy and other entertainment for an audience that makes up a really diverse community,'' Stephanie Steele, the venue's market general manager, said in release from the venue. ''The views expressed by all of the bands that we feature here, and all of the performers, are not necessarily shared by the venue or the staff.''

Ruby Corado, who heads Casa Ruby, said the band should have dropped ''Puto'' from its set list altogether. She also noted that the band has not promised to stop using the controversial lyrics when it performs outside of the United States, characterizing its promise to refrain from using the lyrics as a ''dishonest'' public relations move.

''You don't say, 'Oh, we'll just hate you outside of the United States,''' Corado said of the band's approach to the controversy. ''Because there, there are no rules, there are no laws [that protect LGBT people]. So, in the United States, we're not going to hate you. But we're going, with your money, to promote homophobia outside of your country.''

Corado, a native Spanish speaker originally from El Salvador, pushed back against the claim that the lyrics are about frustrations over political corruption, noting that Molotov's pejoratives are used in a culture that has historically seen homosexuality as a disease. She added that at Casa Ruby, which works with many Latino LGBT people, several clients have experienced violence, harassment or discrimination from other Latinos, particularly newer immigrants who may hold anti-gay attitudes deemed acceptable in their home countries.

''Overall, the band is not homophobic,'' she said. ''But you can't claim you're not at all when you promote lyrics that are. You may not personally practice it, but you promote it, and homophobia is partly about promotion.''

...more

As the senate race heats up, Democratic hopeful Cory Booker and his opponent Steve Lonegan address long-held gay rumors

read more

More than half of all New Mexico residents live in a county with marriage rights for same-sex couples.

read more

The Advocate spoke to the director and subjects of the documentary Before You Know It for insights on love, legacy, activism, and aging.

read more

San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera Thursday filed dual legal challenges involving the termination of City College of San Francisco's accreditation. Last month, the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges revoked City College's accreditation, effective July 2014. The college has appealed the ACCJC's decision, but the August 22 court filings by Herrera, if successful, [...]
Convicted Army Private Bradley Manning on Thursday (August 22) released a statement in which she said that she is a transgender woman and will now be known as Chelsea E. Manning. Manning, 25, was sentenced by an Army judge this week to 35 years in prison for leaking classified government documents to WikiLeaks. Manning was [...]
San Francisco District Attorney George Gascón announced this week that the neighborhood court initiative is expanding to evenings. The program, which Gascón launched in 2011, is an alternative to the traditional criminal justice process. The Southern Neighborhood Court will hold its first night court at the Eucharist Church, 285 Main Street, from 6 to 8 [...]
Applicants are being sought for a vacancy on San Francisco’s LGBT Aging Policy Task Force due to the sudden death last month of the volunteer panel’s vice chair. Jazzie Collins, a transgender woman and longtime progressive leader, died July 11 at the age of 54. She was one of the inaugural members of the LGBT [...]
Supporters of gay Army Private First Class Bradley Manning will gather tonight in San Francisco to protest his sentencing today (Wednesday, August 21) for leaking a massive trove of secret U.S. documents to WikiLeaks. A military judge sentenced Manning to 35 years in prison for disclosing more than 700,000 government files to the online group, [...]
A proposed homeless shelter space focused on LGBTs cleared a hurdle Thursday (August 15) as the seven-member San Francisco Planning Commission unanimously approved needed permits for the site. Advocates and elected officials have been pushing for the 24-bed space, to be located at 1050 South Van Ness Avenue, since a March 2010 Board of Supervisors [...]
Fountaingrove Lodge, a premier 10-acre LGBT retirement community located in Santa Rosa, will host an LGBT professional mixer Wednesday, August 21 and offer a preview of the apartments and amenities. The mixer is free to attend and will provide the opportunity to make new business connections, tour the community’s newly constructed models, and get a [...]
Equality California has confirmed to the Bay Area Reporter that it is not participating in Wednesday’s Most Original Stoli Guy Live event in San Francisco. Earlier Tuesday, Oscar Raymundo of GayCities and Queerty, which is promoting the Stoli event, sent out an email stating that EQCA would be receiving a $5 per person donation. The [...]
A group of investors who had announced they were buying a building in San Francisco’s gay Castro district to open the flagship location for a new chain of gay male burlesque venues has abandoned those plans, the Bay Area Reporter has learned. According to sources, the company RR-SF, which stands for Randy Rooster, over a [...]
A pair of gay California state Senators are calling on officials at two state employee pension funds to disinvest from Russia due to its anti-gay laws. Senators Ricardo Lara (D-Los Angeles) and Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) plan to introduce a resolution Monday, August 12 aimed at encouraging both the California Public Employees’ Retirement System and [...]
 When is this man going to just lay  down and DIE? (is that too harsh?)   He says the stupidest shit! And I don't even normally bother to give this old  bitter tired queen the time of day - but this, was like, WTF?

The 700 Clubs  Pat Robertson claimed that gay people in San Francisco wear special rings in order to cut people so they can then intentionally infect them with AIDS when they shake hands.

Thankfully, CBN edited Robertson's claim out of the broadcast which it aired online, Right Wing Watch reports.

Robertson's claim came in a response to a viewer question from "a woman who wondered if it was wrong for the church not to inform her that a man she was driving to worship services is 'dying of AIDS,.'"

 Robertson rambled:

“There are laws now, I think the homosexual community has put these draconian laws on the books that prohibit people from discussing this particular affliction, you can tell somebody you had a heart attack, you can tell them they’ve got high blood pressure, but you can’t tell anybody you’ve got AIDS...

...You know what they do in San Francisco, some in the gay community there they want to get people so if they got the stuff they’ll have a ring, you shake hands, and the ring’s got a little thing where you cut your finger. Really. It’s that kind of vicious stuff, which would be the equivalent of murder."


Move over Miley Cyrus, its looks like you’ve got some competition when it comes to twerking.  On Wednesday’s PIX11 Morning News, hottie news anchor Dan Mannarino came out from behind the desk to give viewers his version of the latest dance craze. Miley, of course, stirred up some controversy by twerking on the MTV Music […]

The post PIX11′s Dan Mannarino twerks in the morning appeared first on GaySocialites.com.

Following a decision by a state district judge in Albu Albuquerque to declare same sex marriages legal, gay couples in New Mexico are ready to tie the knot. According to the Huffington Post, The clerks in San Miguel and Valencia counties say they’ve ordered gender-neutral forms so they can follow the state’s three population centers in […]

The post New Mexico gays are getting married appeared first on GaySocialites.com.

Harlem Pride and the new Bronx LGBT Center is holding a candle light vigil to remember Islan Nettles, a recently murdered transgendered woman, on Tuesday night. As GaySocialites.com reported last week , Nettles was killed during a confrontation with a group of men who hurled anti-gay remarks at her and friend before attacking her. She […]

The post Vigil planned for transgender woman murdered in Harlem appeared first on GaySocialites.com.

The campaign for New York City Public Advocate has been largely overshadowed by the two other citywide races for mayor and comptroller. The latest polls reveal that more than half of  New York City voters remain undecided on the Public Advocate’s race. No doubt the headline-grabbing antics of disgraced politicians Anthony Weiner and Elliot Spitzer […]

The post GaySocialites.com endorses Daniel Squadron for NYC Public Advocate appeared first on GaySocialites.com.

.



- Sponsors -
Queer Public Radio Queer Public Radio Advertising Original Music by JohnC

No comments:

Post a Comment