Sunday, December 1, 2013

Gay News Magazine Headlines (T24T-2)

Opinion:

As we approach another World AIDS Day I find myself reflecting on one of the most troubling elements in our discussion moving forward. It is a barrier that continually hamstrings our efforts to create real change and fully actualize the turning point of the epidemic.

That troubling element is the stigma, discrimination, blame and collective denial associated with HIV infection. We must confront stigma and its chilling effect on prevention, care and policy. The active and meaningful participation of people living with HIV is essential to a comprehensive and effective response to HIV.

We can think of stigma as the idea of something being disgraceful, something socially unacceptable. This perception of shame prompts us to distance ourselves from the act, action or person associated with the stigma. That distance only reinforces the negative stereotypes of how HIV has entered people's lives. The imagined belief of how HIV enters a person's life is in many ways is the least important part of the conversation. But from the beginning of the epidemic we have judged transmission to the point that we erase the person and focus on acts, causing stigma and separation.

It is the judgment and mistrust created by stigma that affects policy, prevention and even public perception – with chilling results. Stigma hampers our ability to effectively implement programming to help us make the greatest possible strides in countering the epidemic. Stigma helps the epidemic spread, out of sight and underground. It prevents targeted populations from adequately addressing the impact of HIV/AIDS in their local communities.

One of the first things we must do is look inward and reflect on what we can do at the individual level to confront stigma. We truly can make a difference by rethinking and readjusting our approach, starting with one of the most basic and powerful tools for change: our interpersonal interactions and language.

Though it seems simple, sometimes it's the simple things that have the greatest power to create lasting change in society.

Because language is what creates community, it is important to choose words thoughtfully. When we engage one another around issues of disclosure and understanding, we can see that stigma hinders our ability to create a clear picture of an individual. As a result, we rehearse time-honored scripts too often steeped in naiveté and ignorance. Examining the origin and impact of these scripts allows us to unpack old useless baggage and fill these new voids with compassion and understanding.

It's when we begin to make ourselves vulnerable and open that we feel empathy, that we allow ourselves to understand the unique humanity that resides in each of us. In this understanding we gain the ability to see individuals not as the unknown mysterious other, but rather as sisters and brothers of shared commonalities that allow us to connect and engage beyond the divide created by mistrust, ignorance and our lack of understanding.

To break down this barrier to understanding, we must alter the way we view our conversations. When people disclose their status to you, they are opening outstretched hands and offering the keys to a very personal piece of themselves. They simply ask that you equally open up and reach back to bear witness to their inner truth. In this moment we let ourselves experience vulnerability, which is essential to making the transition to changing the course of the epidemic. This transformation in belief brings into question the basis of our fear and hatred of otherness. Only by adopting a politics of vulnerability can we escape the devastating condition that stigma causes.

Dec. 1 is a day when people are looking for action. Getting an HIV test is a powerful action. But equally powerfulIn that moment a person is holding sacred the vulnerability and trust given to them you during an HIV disclosure. Take time to recognize and affirm someone who does this, bearing witness to this great act of human compassion.

This is not call to simply reach out and embrace someone else. I am asking you to reach out and make yourself vulnerable to understand the shared commonality that you have with another individual. I ask you to look beyond the distinctions and remember that we are all humans trying to live, laugh and love in this world, more alike than different.

Matthew Rose is a member of the community advisory board that serves the Vaccine Research Center at NIH. He also serves on the organizing committee of the Young Black Gay Men's Initiative. Follow him on Twitter @MTKRose.

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The boy charged with setting fire to a gender non-conforming Oakland teen appeared in Alameda County Superior Court Tuesday (November 26) as his attorney worked to have him charged as a juvenile. Richard Allen Thomas, 16, allegedly used a lighter to set fire to the skirt of Luke Sasha Fleischman, 18, as Fleischman slept on [...]
One of the good Samaritans who put out the flames on Luke Sasha Fleischman after someone set fire to the agender Oakland teen recently said only one other person aided Fleischman on the crowded bus, but he doesn’t consider himself a hero. Richard Allan Thomas, 16, of Oakland, has been charged with aggravated mayhem and [...]
A fundraiser to help victims of the deadly typhoon that recently hit the Philippines is set for 7 to 10 p.m., Sunday, November 24 at Club OMG, 43 Sixth Street, San Francisco. “So many members of the LGBT community and friends are coming together and donating their time, talents, and money toward this event,” OMG [...]
Local and federal officials are recognizing the 15th annual Transgender Day of Remembrance Wednesday (November 20.) The day, founded by Bay Area Reporter columnist Gwen Smith, honors those who have been lost due to anti-transgender violence and prejudice. One recent incident on many people’s minds is the burning earlier this month of agender high school [...]
The San Francisco Board of Supervisors Tuesday approved applicants for several city panels. First up, Jon Ballesteros and Maggie Weiland were approved to serve on the new advisory body tasked with selecting a terminal at San Francisco International Airport to name after slain gay rights leader Harvey Milk. Ballesteros is a gay Latino man who [...]
The Santa Clara County Sheriff’s office on Thursday, November 14 released a sketch of a man suspected of sexually assaulting a De Anza College student on campus. As the Bay Area Reporter reported in an online story this week, a female student, possibly a pansexual or transgender woman, reported that on Monday, November 4 she [...]
Various fundraising efforts are being launched in the Bay Area’s LGBT community to help the survivors of the deadly Typhoon Haiyan that devastated the Philippines last week. Also called Typhoon Yolanda, the tropical storm obliterated vast swaths of the island nation. News reports in recent days have recounted how food, water and other supplies are [...]
San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee and District 6 Supervisor Jane Kim this week announced a real estate deal that will aid arts organizations that work with LGBTs and others. Lee and Kim joined the new nonprofit Community Arts Stabilization Trust (CAST) Wednesday, November 13 to announce the purchase of two buildings in the Central Market [...]
Rainbow World Fund, an LGBT-headed humanitarian group based in San Francisco, is raising money for survivors of the deadly Typhoon Haiyan, which recently struck the Philippines and killed thousands of people. The cyclone, also known as Typhoon Yolanda, made landfall Thursday, November 7 and is estimated to have displaced more than 600,000 people. Rainbow World [...]
Critics of gay Supervisor Scott Wiener’s legislation to close city parks from midnight to 5 a.m. are continuing their opposition, even after the full board approved his proposal 6-5 on its first reading this week. Saying the group is “disgusted,” the Harvey Milk LGBT Democratic Club said in an open letter to the board Friday, [...]

Kellan Lutz ates gobs of chocolate and lifted weights to get this body!


WATCH  the trailer from Hercules!
THE BATTLE OF AMFAR (premiering on HBO December 2nd at 9pm ET/PT with a sneak preview on HBO 2 on December 1st - World AIDS Day) tells the true story of when AIDS struck and two very different and extraordinary women â€" Hollywood icon Elizabeth Taylor and research scientist Dr. Mathilde Krim â€" joined forces to take a stand and create America’s first AIDS research foundation, AmfAR.

Everyone should watch this - especially the younger generation, who need to understand the history of the disease - and the fact, it has NOT went away. There is no cure!

  Their goal: to unveil the truth of the disease as a worldwide pandemic in desperate need of funding for scientific research to find a cure.  Directed by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman (HBO’s Sundance award-winning THE CELLULOID CLOSET and Oscar©-winning COMMON THREADS:  STORIES FROM THE QUILT) and executive produced by fashion mogul Kenneth Cole, THE BATTLE OF AMFAR chronicles the organization’s history and continuing importance in the fight against HIV/AIDS.

 

By tracing the roots of the AIDS pandemicâ€"through the use of new and archival interviews, news broadcasts, time lapse fluorescence microscopy and animationâ€"THE BATTLE OF AMFAR educates the viewer on the history of the stigma of the virus by examining the political and social attitudes towards those infected since the emergence of the disease.  Rife with poignant interviews from co-founder Dr. Krim, footage of the late Elizabeth Taylor, and a myriad of scientists, physicians, gay rights and AIDS activists, THE BATTLE OF AMFAR not only contextualizes and tracks the creation of the nation’s first AIDS research foundation, but explores the contributions amfAR has made in the hunt for a cure for HIV/AIDS.  Aileen Getty (Elizabeth Taylor’s former daughter-in-law), Regan Hofmann (former editor-in-chief of POZ Magazine) and Phil Wilson (Founder and Executive Director of the Black AIDS Institute) all bring human elements to the film, furthering the narrative that the story of HIV/AIDS is a human one.  Visit: http://www.thebattleofamfar.com/ for additional information.


WATCH Trailer 

Paul Walker, best known for starring in The Fast and Furious franchise, was tragically killed in a car accident this Saturday afternoon in Santa Clarita, California.  He was 40 years old.   TMZ was the first to report the news that Walker was a passenger in a Porsche when the driver somehow lost control of […]

The post Paul Walker Dies in Car Crash appeared first on GaySocialites.com.

Ann Hampton Callaway is one of the most powerful singers in cabaret, and she sustains that power throughout her entire new cabaret act, “Songs I Wish I’d Written”. A songwriter herself â€" best known for writing and singing the theme from the TV hit The Nanny, as well as three songs for Barbra Streisand â€" […]

The post Cabaret Review: Ann Hampton Callaway appeared first on GaySocialites.com.

This year at GaySocialites.com, we’re thankful for you. Without you, we wouldn’t be here today! The GaySocialites family wishes you and yours a Happy Thanksgiving!

The post Happy Thanksgiving from GaySocialites.com appeared first on GaySocialites.com.

GaySocialites.com would like to wish all of our Jewish readers a Happy Hanukkah!

The post Happy Hanukkah from GaySocialites.com appeared first on GaySocialites.com.

It’s official.  Alec Baldwin’s run as a talk show host on MSNBC has come an end, and he blames members of the gay community… not himself… for him being fired.  After a very short run, the NY Post reports: “The decision has been made. He’s gone. The [parent company] Comcast guys have decided. Word is […]

The post Alec Baldwin blames ‘ fundamentalist wing of gay advocacy’ for losing MSNBC show appeared first on GaySocialites.com.



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