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Here's Why Facebook Says It's Not Rolling Out The Rainbow LGBT Reaction Everywhere

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Facebook

Facebook is limiting the availability of its rainbow reaction, which is meant to celebrate Pride Month, and is offering very little detail as to why. The reaction is currently unavailable in a number of locations, including countries with repressive LGBT policies such as Russia.

The rainbow reactions went live this month as part of Facebook’s pride celebration, and appear next to Facebook’s traditional “like,” “haha,” and “wow” reactions. But Facebook says it isn’t rolling them out everywhere because it is “testing” them.

Facebook’s approach to its pride-reaction rollout is drawing criticism from some who think it’s playing into the hands of repressive governments. “This is shameful,” Jillian C. York, director for international freedom of expression at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, wrote on Twitter. “Facebook isn't even ‘kowtowing’ to anti-gay states, they're doing their job for them."

In a post on June 5 announcing the new LGBT-themed reaction, Facebook said “We believe in building a platform that supports all communities. So we’re celebrating love and diversity this Pride by giving you a special reaction to use during Pride Month.” To access the reaction, Facebook asked users to like its LGBTQ@Facebook page.

“Because this is a new experience we’ve been testing, the rainbow reaction will not be available everywhere,” the company said in a blog post.

Although Facebook runs tests all the time, this situation appears different from the typical tech tests the company might use to determine, for example, whether people like its latest Snapchat-inspired feature. Rainbow reactions aren't a feature in and of themselves, and how they're used doesn't influence whether a product is viable or not.

A Facebook spokesperson declined to say whether the test in question was technological, or whether the reaction's limited rollout was designed to take into account repressive governments with anti-LGBT policies.

In this case, Facebook said in its post that the rainbow reactions would be made available to “people in major markets with Pride celebrations.” Other specially themed Facebook reactions, like a set of Halloween reactions that appeared last year, also had a limited rollout. But while Halloween simply isn’t a holiday observed everywhere, LGBT people exist all over the world.

In Russia, which has a law prohibiting "gay propaganda" and where pride parades often get shut down by attacks, people reported being able to see the rainbow reactions but not being able to use them. On its own Facebook page, the company responded to people in other countries inquiring about the rainbow reaction with varieties of this explanation: "This isn't yet available in some areas, but we hope to roll it out in more soon."

Presented with the criticism of its test's limitations, Facebook declined to comment beyond its initial post.


Before Pride: 13 People Talk About Being LGBTQ In The 1960s

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“They would tell us to go across the street, and we would follow the police orders; and there would be another cop across the street waiting to give us a ticket for jaywalking.”

Mccarthy / Getty Images

“I’d sit on the stage and when the cops would come in — y’know because we were raided all the time. Sometimes we knew it sometimes we didn’t. But Jimmy would have a button under the bar. So, when the cops came in he would hit the button and a red light would come on in the back of the room which meant that I had to make sure there was boy-girl, boy-girl, boy-girl when there was dancing. Everyone had to hide their alcohol because we’d bring our own, we weren’t allowed to be served. And hopefully that everyone had identification….They were just nasty.”
Jay Toole on being a bouncer for the mafia-owned lesbian bar Club Bohemia.

Mccarthy / Getty Images

"And I really was very much against the baths, because of what I saw it doing to the gay community. The social structure was deteriorating. Everything had become anonymous all of a sudden. Anonymous sex. And I could not understand or accept. I could not go to bed with somebody I did not know. And to just fling themselves with abandon for a hard cock had no value to me."
Jack Adair, reflecting on how the opening of bath houses affected his sex life and the social scene of gay men in the 1960s.


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How Do Your Puberty Experiences Compare To Other People's?

Here's How Trans Youth Of Colour Are "Redefining Gender" In Toronto

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#RedefiningGender

The City of Toronto wants residents to know that while trans and nonbinary people are a welcome and visible part of the city, "transphobia is not."

The City of Toronto wants residents to know that while trans and nonbinary people are a welcome and visible part of the city, "transphobia is not."

City of Toronto

That's the message of a new campaign designed to challenge people's perceptions of gender identity. The campaign puts people of colour front and centre.

That's the message of a new campaign designed to challenge people's perceptions of gender identity. The campaign puts people of colour front and centre.

City of Toronto

The series of ads features four trans youth of colour from Toronto.

The series of ads features four trans youth of colour from Toronto.

City of Toronto

The ads were made with consultation from the Black Coalition for AIDS Prevention, and are a reminder that it's not race and gender alone that can create barriers.

The ads were made with consultation from the Black Coalition for AIDS Prevention, and are a reminder that it's not race and gender alone that can create barriers.

"In order to understand the needs of trans youth of colour, we must take into consideration various aspects of these youth identities," said Tatiana Ferguson, project lead for Black CAP, in a statement.

"Understanding how race, gender, sex and class interplay and create barriers for trans youth of colour is a fundamental component required to identify and address the needs of trans youth in Toronto," Ferguson said.

City of Toronto


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This Woman Had To Get Divorced Just For Her Gender To Be Acknowledged

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Kirsti Miller (left) with her current partner, Nikki.

Supplied

In 2006, Kirsti Miller was faced with a choice: get a divorce, or keep the word "male" on her birth certificate, despite having transitioned gender.

Miller, a keen AFL player and taxi driver who lives in the outback Australian city of Broken Hill, married her childhood sweetheart in 1985.

Fourteen years later, in 1999, Miller came out as a transgender woman, and started on hormone replacement therapy. In 2006 she had gender reassignment surgery and started changing her legal name and sex on various documents.

But one fact loomed large among the changes: if Miller wanted to change the sex on her birth certificate – considered a crucial identity document in Australia – she and her then-wife would have to divorce.

In order to change the sex on a birth certificate in the state of New South Wales, a person must fulfill four criteria: be over 18, born in NSW, unmarried and have undergone gender affirmation surgery.

"Always at the end of the line, for me to gain my female birth certificate I would have had to divorce her," Miller told BuzzFeed News. "It made a legal terrible ending, we had no way out of that.

"That was written in law for us, when it should have been a decision between us two consenting adults."

Johannes Simon / Getty Images

BuzzFeed News revealed this week that the United Nations Human Rights Committee has declared the same Australian laws that made Miller get divorced are in violation of international human rights law.

In a decision made on March 17 and published on June 15, the committee found in favour of a married transgender woman from NSW, identified only as G, who had tried unsuccessfully on multiple occasions to change the sex on her birth certificate.

It is a significant ruling for Australia, where in six of the eight states and territories married transgender people must divorce from their spouse if they want to change the sex listed on their birth certificate.

G issued a statement via her lawyers on Wednesday, saying it was "a win for common sense and a win for freedom, fairness and human dignity in relationships".

"Governments have made it so that birth certificates are no longer just a record of birth but proof of identity; it therefore needs to be an accurate reflection of reality, of who you are now," she said. "It’s the job of government to record reality, not direct it."

Miller told BuzzFeed News of the emotional anguish she suffered in 2006 due to the divorce requirement.

"It broke my heart the day I had to go into Parramatta Court House and sign these papers for divorce for someone that I didn't want to divorce," she said.

"I didn't want to divorce; I still loved this person. I was made to divorce. Who has the right to tell me I can't stay married to my wife?"

Miller and her ex-wife were not living together as a couple at the time, and were deciding what would happen with their marriage as she transitioned.

"Marriage to us was important, we chose to get married and we should have been the ones to choose when to end the marriage," Miller said.

"It was heartbreaking, but to live my life fully as a woman, I had to have that amendment on my birth certificate. So if I went to jail, I would go to a women's prison. So if I played sport, I would be allowed to play in a women's competition."

Green Party senator Janet Rice.

Mick Tsikas / AAPIMAGE

Greens senator Janet Rice and her wife, climatologist Penny Whetton, are currently bound by a similar transgender forced divorce law in Victoria.

They have chosen to remain married, which means Whetton, who is transgender, has to keep "male" on her birth certificate for the foreseeable future.

Rice told BuzzFeed News she wasn't surprised by the UN committee's decision.

"Forcing married trans people to divorce in order to officially change the gender on their birth certificates is absolutely a gross violation of human rights – it is discriminatory and unjust," she said.

"Why should my partner Penny and I divorce when we love each other, in order for Penny to have a birth certificate that says female?"

Rice also hit out at the inconsistencies identified by the UN, describing the law in Australia as "inconsistent and idiotic".

"It’s bizarre that someone can change the gender on their passport, but not their birth certificate. This inconsistency is mind-boggling."

David Mcnew / Getty Images

In its submission to the UN, Australia argued the laws were necessary to uphold the Marriage Act, which bans same-sex marriage.

The UN committee said it was unclear why changed birth certificates are, and changed passports are not, a threat to the Marriage Act.

"The state party has not provided any explanation why a change in sex on a birth certificate would result in irreconcilable and unacceptable conflict with the Marriage Act if the author remains married, whereas a change in sex on her passport in identical circumstances is allowed," the decision read.

The committee also questioned why it was in Australia's interests to allow conflicting identity documents "that are not consistent with the actual personal situation".

Longtime marriage equality advocate Rodney Croome dismissed the government's argument that the forced divorce law is necessary to avoid conflict with the Marriage Act.

"The ACT and South Australia have both repealed their transgender forced divorce laws without the sky falling in," he said.

He called on the six state and territory governments to immediately repeal their laws in accordance with the UN decision.

BuzzFeed News understands the federal government is currently consulting with the NSW government about the UN committee decision and expects to provide a response by the requested date of December 15, 2017.

Supplied

Meanwhile, Miller currently faces a different but equally painful marriage dilemma. She would love to marry her current partner, Nikki Phillips, but can't because of Australia's same-sex marriage ban.

The two women, both cabbies in Broken Hill, have been engaged for four years.

They feel wholly accepted by the locals and would like to keep living there – as wife and wife.

"I want to stay with Nikki for the rest of my life, with her as my wife and me as hers," Miller said. "It's very important to both of us."

Biden Tells LGBT Community: "Hold Trump Accountable For His Pledge To Be Your Friend"

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Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

NEW YORK — As the White House conspicuously declines to formally recognize Pride Month, former Vice President Joe Biden on Wednesday urged the LGBT community to push back against President Donald Trump.

“The first thing you should do, even though he won’t respond, is hold President Trump accountable for his pledge to be your friend,” Biden told a swanky Democratic National Committee (DNC) LGBT gala in midtown Manhattan. “Demonstrate that public opinion and history are on our side! Just because you don’t have Barack and me in the White House doesn’t mean it’s time to give up, keep quiet, stay in the sidelines.”

While candidate Trump pledged to “fight for” the LGBT community in a tweet last June — and posed with a Pride Flag at an October rally — his administration has so far declined to issue a proclamation recognizing June as LGBT Pride Month — as he did to mark African American History Month in February and Women’s History Month in March.

Throughout the month, BuzzFeed News has asked the White House repeatedly if it plans to release a Pride Month statement. In response, spokesperson Kelly Love has said, “We will let you know if anything official goes out.”

“The President is proud to have been the first ever GOP nominee to mention the LGBTQ community in his nomination acceptance speech, pledging then to protect the community from violence and oppression," another White House spokesperson did say back in January, when announcing that Trump would continue to enforce Obama-era workplace protections for LGBT workers and contractors.

Trump at a campaign rally in Greeley, Colorado, on Oct. 30, 2016.

Carlo Allegri / Reuters

DNC Finance Chair Henry R. Muñoz III told BuzzFeed News that Trump has been “obtuse” in his relationship with the LGBT community. “I don’t know where he stands,” he said.

“Look at the people he’s surrounded himself with, look at the people that have brought him to the White House, look at his vice president,” Muñoz said. “You can say one thing, but then you have to do something. You have to act on it.”

Muñoz also defended the symbolic act of a presidential proclamation for Pride Month. “Celebrations are important. Celebrations in that House are important because they’re saying this House belongs to you,” he said.

DNC Executive Director Jessica O'Connell told BuzzFeed News the White House was "obviously not walking the talk."

"Here we are in Pride, we haven't heard a word from the president," she said. "I think that this is an administration that might have wagged a flag during the campaign, but it seems like they're trying to erase us right now. It's very quiet."

Biden was awarded the inaugural “LGBT Hero Award” at the DNC fundraiser Wednesday. During his speech, he recounted the Obama administration’s efforts to advocate for the rights of LGBT Americans in the military, health care, and in marriage: “Together we struck down the Defense of Marriage Act and we lit the White House in rainbow colors,” he recalled.

“One of the reasons, in spite of this terrible period we’re going through, I’m confident we’ll prevail is because most change occurs culturally before it occurs governmentally,” he said. “The country is way ahead, way ahead of political leadership.”

The Footy Show Made An Anti-Transgender Joke About Caitlyn Jenner And People Are Furious

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Transgender advocates and St Kilda Football Club have hit out at the Nine Network's AFL Footy Show for making jokes about Caitlyn Jenner and transgender people.

Channel Nine

On Wednesday evening, the show screened a digitally altered version of St Kilda banner on screen.

The original banner at the ground read "Saint or North / It's a massive game / The battle for the best / Kardashian baby name".

However, the AFL Footy Show digitally altered the banner so it read "Saints r on a roll / Believe the hype / Last week wasn't pretty / Like this Kardashian lookalike". The show also inserted photos of athlete turned reality TV star Caitlyn Jenner.

Channel Nine

Panellist Billy Brownless asked veteran Aussie Rules player turned TV personality Sam Newman for his thoughts on the banner, joking that Newman and Jenner look alike.

Brownless: "That is a lookalike, you and Caitlyn. Do you know who Caitlyn is?"

Newman: "I know who he is... who it is. I do." [Groans and laughter from audience and panel.] "Oh well, what is she? Is it a he or she now?"

Rebecca Maddern: "It's a she now. He is a she now."

Off camera: "She is a she."

Newman: "Is it transgender, is it, or what is it?"

Co-host Craig Hutchison then moved the conversation on.

Sam Newman issued an apology for his comments on Thursday: "I regret the comments I made about Caitlyn Jenner. What I said was not appropriate and I’m sorry to anyone offended."

Kirsti Miller, who is a transgender woman and huge AFL fan who plays in the women's competition in Broken Hill, NSW, labelled the segment "disgusting".

Miller fought for years to be able to play in the Broken Hill women's league.

"I'd like to meet Sam face-to-face. Five minutes of Kirsti, he'll figure out we're normal people who love football just like he does. Don't make fun of us."

"Research shows the use of language can have a significant impact on the mental health and well-being of members of the LGBTI community," he said.

"Comedy at the expense of transgender people is no joke."

St Kilda has contacted the AFL Footy Show to say it was disappointed by the segment.

25 Pride Signs That Will Make You Laugh Way Harder Than You Should


Sessions Backs LGBT Pride Month Event Where Employees Plan To Honor Transgender Student

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Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

A day after an LGBT employee group at the Justice Department announced plans to honor lawyers and a student seeking to advance transgender rights at a pride month program next week, Attorney General Jeff Sessions spoke positively to staff Thursday about the upcoming event.

"We are going to have a pride group, in this very room, I think next week, I believe it is, and so that's perfectly appropriate, and we will protect and defend and celebrate that — and protect the rights of all transgender persons," Sessions said in response to a question posed to him by an intern.

The answer appeared in a video posted by Courtney Hagle, who wrote, "Had the honor of asking Attorney General Jeff Sessions a question that is very important to me today!"

Hagle asked Sessions about the lack of acknowledgement from the White House or Justice Department of pride month thus far in June, leading Sessions to reference the planned June 28 program. Reached by BuzzFeed News, Hagle declined to comment on the video and question she asked of Sessions.

On Wednesday, BuzzFeed News reported that DOJ Pride — the department's group for LGBT employees and allies — planned to recognize transgender student Gavin Grimm and department lawyers who were working on two lawsuits brought by DOJ to support transgender rights at next week's program.

When Sessions and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos withdrew pro-transgender guidance regarding students' restroom use, the move resulted in a delay in Grimm's lawsuit challenging his school's restroom policy beyond his high-school graduation.

Despite DOJ Pride's plans, Sessions appeared to remain supportive of the event — although he did not say whether he would be attending. DOJ spokespeople have not said who, if anyone, from department's leadership will be attending.

Sessions went on, in responding to Hagle, to discuss a review he says he ordered regarding anti-transgender killings.

"For example, I received a letter expressing concern about the sudden transgender persons who had been killed, and concern about it, and so I, first thing, directed the civil rights division to look into those ... to see if there was any uniform attack, or if there was just a uniform hostility that would result in these murders, and to review each one of those cases that were sent to me," he said. "And they have done that, and I think it's possible that they're going to re-open one and solve it, as a result of that."

Justice Department spokespeople did not immediately respond to a request for more information about the letter Sessions was referencing, the review he said he called for, or what case the attorney general believes may be re-opened.

Sessions concluded by saying that "we are not going to allow persons in this country to be discriminated against or attacked in any way for their sexual orientation —"

Hagle then spoke up again — cutting off Sessions, so it was not clear if he would have added "or gender identity," or otherwise acknowledged the distinction between sexual orientation and gender identity — and reiterated the part of her initial question regarding the lack of White House recognition of LGBT Pride Month — a question BuzzFeed News has posed directly to the White House, only to be told that we will be informed if any proclamation is released.

To that, Sessions simply responded that he didn't know the White House's plans.

Watch the question and Sessions's response:

Via Twitter: @CourtneyHagle


Hey Everyone, Here's The Babadook Dildo You Definitely Asked For

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Presenting: THE BABADONG.

Our good pal Dooky was (partially) launched to internet fame by a Tumblr post randomly claiming the monster was gay, which, in true earnest Tumblr fashion, sparked a fierce "Babadiscourse" among users.

Our good pal Dooky was (partially) launched to internet fame by a Tumblr post randomly claiming the monster was gay, which, in true earnest Tumblr fashion, sparked a fierce "Babadiscourse" among users.

Twitter: @broderick

People latched onto the idea and seriously ran with it, creating truly glorious fan art that had everybody BabaSHOOK.

Instagram: @djmikeypop

And because the internet is so wonderfully extra, it didn't stop there... *clears throat* THERE IS NOW A BABADOOK DILDO, AKA A BABADONG.

And because the internet is so wonderfully extra, it didn't stop there... *clears throat* THERE IS NOW A BABADOOK DILDO, AKA A BABADONG.

😊😊😊

indiegogo.com


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21 Moments From Season 9 Of RuPaul's Drag Race That Left Us Gagging

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Gentleman start your engines, and may the best woman win.

The season finale of RuPaul's Drag Race season 9 airs tomorrow, and I'm still coming to terms with everything that happened this season.

The season finale of RuPaul's Drag Race season 9 airs tomorrow, and I'm still coming to terms with everything that happened this season.

VH1

The season has been a whirlwind, and I can't imagine what Ru has in store for the finale. To help mentally, spiritually, and emotionally prepare yourself for tomorrow's episode here's a recap of the top moments from season 9.

The season has been a whirlwind, and I can't imagine what Ru has in store for the finale. To help mentally, spiritually, and emotionally prepare yourself for tomorrow's episode here's a recap of the top moments from season 9.

Logo

When the queens realized they were in the presence of the one and only Lady GaGa.

When the queens realized they were in the presence of the one and only Lady GaGa.

VHI

Alexis Michelle asking Tamar Braxton if she's ever seen an episode of RuPaul's Drag Race.

Alexis Michelle asking Tamar Braxton if she's ever seen an episode of RuPaul's Drag Race.

VHI


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6 Happy Coming Out Stories That Will Really Make Your Week Better, Trust Me

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Amidst the violence and subjugation our friends face every day, here’s a little bit of proof that not everyone is intolerant.

Kartik Sharma

Kartik Sharma

"The very first time I came out was to my best friend Anshuman. This was some ten years back. I have known him for longer than a decade now and he is one of those genuine people who loves others for who they are. Hence, I felt he must know the truth. And, knowing him, I knew we would never part ways because of my sexuality.

When I came out to him, the first thing Anshuman asked me was, 'Why did it take you so long to tell me? Did you never realise that your sexuality would never affect our friendship. We are friends not because of your sexual identity, Kartik. You’re still my friend and we’ll always be, the way we are.'

Since then, there was no looking back. That's when I realised I have a family outside my own. That family was Anshuman. His words of acceptance made me happier all the more."

Kartik Sharma

Akshay Raundhal

Akshay Raundhal

"I came out to my girlfriend of two years. Curse me all you want because I deserve it. I was at the weakest point of my life when I decided, 'No. I can't be this double agent juggling between my girlfriend in real life and going online to look for guys similar to me'. I was 17 when a random (hot) stranger knocked some sense into me that I needed to tell her the truth. She was the first person I came out to. Her response: 'Watching too many TV shows these days?'

This beautiful, one in a million weirdo who deserves the best in her life accepted me without holding any grudges and is one of the strongest pillars of my life. It's been three years since I came out to her. We've had our ups and downs but the bond still remains. She is finally happy with someone who truly deserves her. She helped me accept the fact that I belong to the world of rainbows. And guess what? She even attends queer events with me as an ally. Now who doesn't want a catch like that?"

Akshay Raundhal

Sudhanshu Latad

Sudhanshu Latad

The first person I ever came out to was my best friend Yash. I still wonder what I would have done if he had reacted otherwise on that day. I was in 9th Grade, and my 13-year-old brain was strong enough to know and accept my sexuality, but not enough to come to terms with saying it out loud to someone.

On that random day, I texted Yash after a normally dreadful day at school. In the middle of our regular texting, I blurted out that I had a confession to make. Patient as he was, he asked what it was, and if he needed to worry. I had reached the point of no return, where he was determined to find out what I was hiding, and my brain, anxiously overthinking as always, started coming up with different scenarios of homophobic reactions. After all, expecting an 'it's okay' would have been foolish of me. Finally, after mentally going through a flash of various disastrous potential outcomes, our broken friendship being the worst amongst them, without giving it another thought I said those three words for the first time to another person: 'I am gay.'

Let's just say, the mood of our conversation shifted slightly from 'I am worried' to 'I kinda knew'. All in all, it was that day that I realised that this chap was never letting me go, hook or crook. It was really surreal that in a society where people do not even know much about the term 'gay' I was accepted by my straight best friend, in a humorous way. His acceptance has made me strong. Made me believe that I and many others like me can be accepted and loved. I hope every small town Sudo has his Yash at that point of time in his life where one needs someone to talk to desperately."

Sudhanshu Latad

Koninika Roy

Koninika Roy

"I came out to my sister in the stupidest way possible. Over WhatsApp. I think it was about a year ago when I had gone abroad to study. Being three years older than me and single, she kept getting bombarded by Indian aunties telling her to get married. One day while discussing this frustrating phenomenon, I told my sister, I am glad that I won’t have that problem. That I won’t be asked those questions. To which she paused and said, 'yeah, lucky you'. I then had to confirm so I said to her, 'You know, because I’m bi and I don’t want to marry a man'. She said, 'yes, I know'."

Koninika Roy


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6 Reasons To Celebrate The Colours Of Pride

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Happy Pride Month, Canada!

Each colour of the rainbow pride flag corresponds to a particular meaning — like life, nature, and spirit. Take a stroll through LGBTQI history in Canada with the rainbow as your guide.

Red: Life

Red: Life

On July 20, 2005, Canada became the fourth country in the world to legalize same-sex marriage after the Civil Marriage Act was passed. Once passed it recognized that “marriage, for civil purposes, is the lawful union of two persons to the exclusion of all others,” not as a union exclusively between a man and a woman.

After legalization, between 2006 and 2011, the number of same-sex married couples nearly tripled.

JUNIORSKEPTIC/BuzzFeed Canada

Orange: Healing

Orange: Healing

“Operation Soap” was a raid led by Toronto Police on Feb. 4, 1981, when police officers raided four of the city’s bathhouses armed with sledgehammers and crowbars. More than 250 gay men were arrested during this raid, and many were summoned to court. During the arrests and court appearances, numerous closeted gay men were outed to their family and friends.

The following night, 3,000 people marched and protested the police in solidarity. That march evolved into the annual Toronto Pride parade.

JUNIORSKEPTIC/BuzzFeed Canada

Yellow: Sunlight

Yellow: Sunlight

During the 2016 Toronto Pride parade, the Black Lives Matter movement halted the parade with a list of demands for organizers, including greater support for events for people of colour. But the most talked about demand was the removal of uniformed police officers from the parade itself — a discussion that has spread across the country.

There’s a long history of people of colour, trans folks, and others from LGBT communities being targeted by police, including the very roots of Toronto’s Pride festivities.

JUNIORSKEPTIC/BuzzFeed Canada


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This Transgender Australian Took Her Fight To The United Nations, And Won

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A marriage equality protest in Sydney.

Cole Bennetts / Getty Images

The woman behind a landmark United Nations committee decision decrying Australia's laws around marriage and gender transition says the current law is "a joke" and the decision should prompt the government to legislate marriage equality.

BuzzFeed News revealed this week that the United Nations Human Rights Committee ruled that Australian laws requiring married transgender people to divorce before they can change the sex on their birth certificate are in violation of international human rights law.

In a decision made on March 17 and published on June 15, the committee found in favour of a married transgender woman from New South Wales, identified only as G, who had tried unsuccessfully on multiple occasions to change the sex on her birth certificate.

It is a significant ruling for Australia, where laws with this effect exist in six of the eight states and territories.

BuzzFeed News interviewed G, who first brought the complaint in 2011, under the condition of anonymity via her lawyers at DLA Piper.

Johannes Simon / Getty Images

G, who married in 2005 and tried to change her birth certificate for the first time in 2006, described her situation as a "terrible dichotomy".

"It’s manifestly unfair and requires a person to collude with bureaucracy to create a falsehood – either that your relationship does not exist, or your identification be at odds with your appearance, identity and life, and therefore also a lie," she said.

In its submission to the UN, Australia argued the laws were necessary to uphold the Marriage Act, which bans same-sex marriage. The UN committee did not accept this argument, and G said it is "a joke".

In its ruling, the UN committee said Australia failed to explain why a change in sex on a birth certificate conflicts with the Marriage Act, while a change in sex on a passport does not.

To G, the answer is simple: legislate marriage equality and the complex difficulties with legal gender identity will be solved.

"The obvious answer is to remove the stipulation of 'one man, one woman' from the Marriage Act," she said.

"I’ve said for a long time that this [legal route] was the way to demonstrate the requirement for equal, non-discriminatory marriage laws, and now there is international pressure to bring it about, because conflict with the Marriage Act is what is given as the reason for this situation in the first place."

Prime minister Malcolm Turnbull

Ryan Pierse / Getty Images

Birth certificates are "cardinal" identity documents in Australia, meaning they are the basic documents needed to get other identity documents, such as a passport. It's for this reason, G said, that birth certificates have to reflect the current reality and not just what was recorded at birth.

"If they were not used [as cardinal identity documents], it would not be such a problem," she said.

"However, government standards for identification often call for a person to produce one [form of ID, in order to apply for] other identification items, and so the need for them to be able to be corrected is pretty obvious."

Having incorrect or conflicting identity documents can create problems in all sorts of situations for transgender people such as enrolling at university, dealing with government departments and applying for jobs.

G said the birth certificate issue and UN complaint had "caused problems" in her marriage.

"It’s just one more stress you don’t need, and the fight to have things corrected takes its toll in time and energy, unwanted public exposure and comment on our lives," she said.

"There are enough stress, roadblocks and difficulty in transition already without there being added unnecessary burdens along the way."

Don Emmert / AFP / Getty Images

The UN has ordered Australia to provide G with a birth certificate marked female, and to revise the law to stop the same thing happening again.

However, although Australia has ratified the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, it is not compelled to abide by the committee's ruling.

BuzzFeed News understands the federal government is currently consulting with the NSW government about the UN committee decision and expects to provide a response by the requested date of December 15, 2017.

Emily Christie, the lead lawyer representing G at DLA Piper said: "This decision makes it clear that the Human Rights Committee considers gender identity, and the ability to change one’s legal identity, to be of fundamental importance.

"The possibility of an inconsistency with marital laws is not a sufficient reason to refuse to change someone’s birth certificate or interfere with their marital status."

26 Pride Memes That Will Make Every Queer Person Say “MEEE!"


The US Military Probably Won't Meet Its Deadline To Fully Integrate Transgender Troops

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Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

The US military's plan to integrate transgender troops by July 1 has been delayed by at least six months, according to the Associated Press, which reported that the US military services chiefs asked for more time to complete integration.

Under guidelines established in 2016, the service branches had until the end of this month to outline how they would each bring transgender troops into the fold. While at least 5,000 transgender service members are already in the military’s active duty forces, the services are still crafting policy on the final step in the guidelines: how to recruit and integrate new troops.

Instead, the Army and Air Force asked for two more years to finish studying how to welcome transgender troops, officials within the branches told BuzzFeed News. The Navy, on the other hand, said it would be ready by July 1, but has asked the Pentagon for an additional year following a request by the Marine Corps, which falls under the Navy's purview.

According to the AP report, the chiefs agreed to the six-month delay.

Top Pentagon officials did little to clarify the reasons for the delay, particularly as transgender troops already serve. Dana White, the Pentagon's top spokesperson, confirmed that the chiefs asked for more time, but would not say for how long. Earlier this month, White refused to say whether the July 1 deadline would be met.

The service chiefs made their recommendations to Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work, who will submit his recommendations to Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis. White said on Friday that Mattis had not yet made a decision because he had not received Work’s recommendation.

It is currently unclear what purpose the extra time would serve. The services have previously said they were concerned about whether the US military could deploy people undergoing transition — but military health care has paid for medical transition for transgender troops since last October. There have also been no reports of major incidents, conflicts, or effects on force readiness concerning transgender troops. A 2016 RAND Corporation report commissioned by the Defense Department concluded that integrating transgender troops would have “minimal impact.”

“The limited research on the effects of foreign military policies indicates little or no impact on unit cohesion, operational effectiveness, or readiness,” the RAND study found.

"This proposed delay is disappointing because it's such an incredibly important recruitment change," Ashley Broadway-Mack, president of the American Military Partner Association, a resource network for LGBT service members, veterans, and their families, told BuzzFeed News.

"Secretary Mattis has made clear he believes there is a need to increase troop levels, and any qualified American who is willing and able to serve should have the opportunity to join the ranks, regardless of their gender identity," Broadway-Mack said. "We urge Secretary Mattis to reject further delays and move quickly in implementing this important recruitment policy."

It’s Pride. It’s Ramadan. And It Still Isn’t Easy To Be An LGBT Muslim

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LGBT Muslims and friends pray behind a woman, one of the many unconventional features of an LGBT iftar this month in Minneapolis.

Hannah Allam for BuzzFeed News

Just before sunset one Friday this month, a few dozen guests walked downstairs and into a church basement where lanterns flickered on banquet tables piled with food from Afghanistan, Morocco, and Sudan.

The descent was fitting because this iftar — the meal when Muslims break their daily fast in Ramadan — was underground in every sense of the word.

Organized by and for LGBT Muslims and their allies in Minneapolis, the dinner required extraordinary planning to ensure the privacy and safety of people who often feel shunned in both Muslim and LGBT circles. The hosts were from Minnesota Caravan of Love, which began as an informal group of friends and now holds regular events to amplify LGBT Muslim voices in the Twin Cities. Still, the fact that nearly all of them spoke on condition of anonymity is a small illustration of the risks that come with their activism.

Just a year ago, the main organizer, a 32-year-old gay Afghan PhD student, gave his real name in news interviews and was filmed dancing down a Minneapolis street during the 2016 Pride parade. But a few months ago his family back in Afghanistan caught wind of his activism, forcing him to start writing and speaking publicly under an alias, Nur Jibran.

“At first I stopped, but then I thought, ‘There needs to be a voice, even if it’s under a borrowed name,'” he said.

The idea behind the iftar was to bridge two main fissures LGBT Muslims face as they try to join a national activist movement that’s been reinvigorated by the election of President Donald Trump. LGBT Muslims say their sexual identities make them anathema to most mainstream Muslim groups; the reception isn’t much better in LGBT crowds now that views about Islam have soured since the Pulse nightclub massacre in Orlando. The strained relations are an obstacle to getting marginalized groups to form a united front to fight Trump administration policies they see as harmful to their interests.

“Right now, given the political climate, we have to unite.”

When organizers of the Minneapolis iftar hit up clubs and cafés to pass out flyers for the event, they met resistance from both Muslim and LGBT invitees. One volunteer tried to give a flyer to a Pakistani man who was a regular at his favorite café; he said the man rejected the event and warned that no one would come. Other volunteers said they’d been similarly rebuffed at gay bars.

A Mexican-American activist from Caravan of Love, who asked that his name not be included, said he realized what Muslims were up against when he was passing out iftar flyers at a club, telling LGBT patrons that “right now, given the political climate, we have to unite.” A non-Muslim guy snapped at him.

“He’s like, ‘They just want to kill us all. Why would you ever want to volunteer for Muslim people when they want you dead?’” the activist said.

Earlier this month, seven protesters were arrested at the Minnesota State Capitol during so-called anti-Sharia marches. Gay critics of Islam were among the top organizers of the nationwide marches, which largely fizzled due to poor attendance.

Pax Hart, an organizer of the marches, has said in interviews that he’s been called an Uncle Tom for breaking with others in the LGBT community and supporting Trump. He was quoted as saying his only friends are conservatives and libertarians because LGBT leftists are in denial that “everywhere on the planet that Islam has a significant presence, there’s bloodshed, savagery, oppression, and intimidation.”

Another gay organizer of the anti-Sharia marches, Atlanta-based Arch Kennedy, has been quoted as saying he’s recently begun working with ACT for America, which extremism trackers at the Southern Poverty Law Center call “far and away the largest grassroots anti-Muslim group in America.”

A Tribe Called Quest perform "We the People" at the 59th annual Grammy Awards on Feb. 12.

Matt Sayles / AP

Others are growing more vocal in rejecting what they consider right-wing attempts to drive a wedge between LGBT and Muslim communities; their focus is raising awareness about how Trump associates disparage both groups. A Tribe Called Quest’s 2016 activist anthem, “We the People,” makes that point in a hook: “Muslims and gays / Boy, we hate your ways.”

A few Muslim leaders with national profiles have called for greater support of LGBT rights, but an internal Muslim debate rages on whether such overtures are religiously permissible.

“It will take brave souls, people who are from both communities, living courageously, to make change,” said Salma Hussein, 29, a Somali-American social worker who said she’s sometimes forced to be a “closeted ally” because of cultural and religious taboos when it comes to LGBT issues. “It takes a lot of courage, but people should see that there are Muslims who are also part of the LGBT community. So they can see the human side.”

The groups have seen results when activists are on the same page. In May, for example, Trump’s pick for Army secretary, a Republican state senator from Tennessee named Mark Green, withdrew from consideration amid criticism of his anti-Muslim and anti-LGBT comments. News reports said that Green opposes same-sex marriage and has described being transgender as a disease. Green also has urged public schools to fight “the indoctrination of Islam” and has made reference to a “Muslim horde.”

“Now is not the time for highlighting divisions. I’m trying to find the unifying points.”

This month, writer and filmmaker Dylan Marron launched a web series called “Extreme(ly Queer) Muslims” to show the links between anti-gay and anti-Muslim hostility. In the series, timed to the overlap of Ramadan and Pride this month, Marron chats with Muslim guests about the tensions and says he will no longer be “used as a pawn in the hatred of one community in the same way that I know other communities have been used as pawns in the hatred of my community.”

That idea was echoed by some non-Muslim LGBT guests at the iftar. They might not know much about Islam, they said, but they knew plenty about being discriminated against and finding few allies to speak up on their behalf.

“For so much of my life, who I am has been demonized by so many people, and there hasn’t been anyone willing to just stand up and say, ‘What’s wrong with being gay?’” said Erin Bryan, a guest at the dinner. “I want to be one of those people that can stand up.”

But organizers said the ugly political backdrop affected their ability to recruit people for the iftar. And Caravan of Love volunteers wondered how many of those who ate with them in private would be bold enough to join them in public the following week to walk alongside the first Muslim LGBT float in the local Pride parade Sunday.

The iftar was a sort of trial balloon. News of it spread through a private Facebook group and word of mouth, making it hard to get a head count. Each host was in charge of a table for eight. Some cooked all day, using family recipes for yogurt chicken or samosas; others ordered from restaurants or arrived with a huge bag of the city’s best tacos. Volunteers came early to transform the drab church basement into a cozy hall with Middle Eastern flourishes. Ivory tablecloths were set with jewel-colored cups reminiscent of the rainbow flag.

Hannah Allam for BuzzFeed News

The first clue that this was a rather unorthodox iftar was the program guests received upon arrival. At 9:03 p.m. there would be the call to prayer and the breaking of the fast with dates and milk. At 10:00 p.m.: “Pride dance party.” Many other features of the evening would’ve drawn disapproval — if not anger — from more conservative Muslims. For example, a woman gave the call to prayer and another woman led the prayer, roles usually reserved for men.

“Now is not the time for highlighting divisions. I’m trying to find the unifying points,” said a 37-year-old Egyptian-American artist and activist who asked to use only his first name, Ali. “If I’m going to sit here and preach allyship, I need to do the work, too.”

The hosts and their guests tucked into plates of couscous and chatted frankly about the strain in relations since the Orlando attack. The conversations were helped by icebreaker questions on slips of paper at each table. One was about the meaning of Ramadan, a time often spent between quiet spiritual reflection and raucous family gatherings.

“We have Christmas for a full month and we’re not missing out on anything — especially the family drama,” Jibran, the lead organizer of the iftar, cracked in opening remarks to his guests.

Jibran said he came up with the name “Caravan of Love” out of his heartbreak over learning that the Pulse nightclub shooter, Omar Mateen, also was of Afghan descent. The caravan reference comes from Rumi, the 13th-century Muslim mystic whose poetry has fans around the world.

Jibran grew up in the midst of war from ages 8 to 14, working on the street to help support his family. He endured so much grief about his “femininity,” he said, that he spent long stretches in isolation, writing in genderless Persian so that it sounded like his love poems were meant for women.

Coming to the United States from Afghanistan as a college student, Jibran said, had given him an opportunity to express his full identity without fear or shame. He resents the forces that are trying to mute him once again, and said it’s time for both Muslim and LGBT groups to work harder to overcome barriers to partnership. He pointed to the dozen or so Muslim allies who attended the iftar in support of LGBT friends as evidence that times are changing, slowly.

“It was overwhelming,” Jibran said the next afternoon. “I’m still processing it. Of course, there were moments that I was fearful that anybody could walk in and start shooting, but at the same time, I just wanted to enjoy every single moment.”

Hannah Allam for BuzzFeed News

15 Penis Facts Urologists Want You To Know

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Straight from the mouths of people who know penises best.

If you have a penis, then chances are you've had some ~questions~ about it from time to time.

If you have a penis, then chances are you've had some ~questions~ about it from time to time.

I mean, where TF are all these random boners coming from? Why won't it go up when I actually need it to? Did I just catch herpes?

🤔🤔🤔

To gain a better understanding of what the penis is all about, BuzzFeed Health spoke to a few of the people who know penises best: urologists Dr. Seth Cohen of NYU Langone Medical Center, Dr. David Shusterman of NY Urology, and Dr. Landon Trost, head of andrology and male infertility at Mayo Clinic. Here are some things they wanted you to know.

Noggin / Via giphy.com

If you're uncircumcised, then you're going to have to put a little more effort into creating a ~hygienic environment~.

If you're uncircumcised, then you're going to have to put a little more effort into creating a ~hygienic environment~.

A lot of people don't actually clean underneath the foreskin, but they really should be, Cohen and Shusterman tell BuzzFeed Health. "Men who are uncircumcised need to make sure to pull back the foreskin every day, wash it with soap and water, and then pull the skin back over the penis," Cohen says.

The foreskin fits on pretty snugly, making it the perfect place for dirt and bacteria to build up, Cohen says. And while it's unclear whether uncircumcised people face a higher risk of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) because of their foreskin, the underside of it can definitely provide the perfect breeding grounds for infections to thrive — like genital warts from human papilloma virus (HPV), the most common STI. Over time, that buildup can lead to inflammation in the foreskin (balanitis) or being unable to pull the foreskin back over the penis (phimosis), Cohen says.

These issues might also contribute to the slightly higher risk of of penile cancer in people who are uncircumcised, Cohen says. That said, it's really just something to be aware of because it's so rare (it makes up less than 1% of cancers in men in the US). "It’s not terribly high, but it does happen," Trost tells BuzzFeed Health.

Cartoon Network / Via giphy.com

Some STIs might show up with symptoms, but many of them do not — so protect yourself and get tested

Some STIs might show up with symptoms, but many of them do not — so protect yourself and get tested

You might have a feeling you have gonorrhea because it burns when you pee, or maybe you think that cluster of red bumps that just showed up is herpes. Maybe you see some warts looking like broccoli or cauliflower florets every time you pull back your foreskin. While these are all obvious signs of a potential STI, sometimes there won't be any symptoms whatsoever. So it's important to remember that not all STIs are only spread through bodily fluids. Some, like herpes and HPV, can be passed through skin-to-skin contact, Cohen says. "Even if they wear condoms, and vaginal juices or other juices go below the condom to the base of the shaft or the pubic region — they can still get warts or herpes there," he says.

You can read more about STIs and getting tested here.

@plannedparenthood / Via instagram.com

Masturbating is good for you, so go for it, you wanker.

Masturbating is good for you, so go for it, you wanker.

If you've ever heard the phrase, "Use it or lose it," then you're not alone. Basically, it means getting off through masturbation or sex helps ensure that you don't lose the ability to maintain an erection. And while Shusterman says this is something to keep in mind in general, Trost says that chances are you only really have to worry about it more at a later age, if and when you go through other issues that directly affect erectile dysfunction (ED) — like radiation therapy for prostate cancer.

That said, "masturbation is 100% normal and 100% encouraged. When you use it, all the blood flows into the penis and by using it, you’re actually clearing up the blood vessels inside," Shusterman says. "When someone comes in and tells me they don’t masturbate, they get wet dreams — basically your natural masturbation technique. Nature takes over."

TNT / Via giphy.com


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Shane And Alice From "The L Word" Are Literally Best Friend Goals IRL

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*Sings, “girls in tight dresses, who drag in mustaches” at the top of my lungs.*

It's been eight years since one of TV's greatest duos, Shane (Kate Moennig) and Alice (Leisha Hailey), left us.

It's been eight years since one of TV's greatest duos, Shane (Kate Moennig) and Alice (Leisha Hailey), left us.

Showtime / Via tumblr.com

But, you'll be happy to know their friendship lasted through the series finale and spilled into their real lives.

But, you'll be happy to know their friendship lasted through the series finale and spilled into their real lives.

Showtime / Via tumblr.com

That's right, the ladies are closer than ever and it's giving me ALL the feels!

That's right, the ladies are closer than ever and it's giving me ALL the feels!

instagram.com

Despite their busy schedules, Kate and Leisha always make time for the important things in life:

Despite their busy schedules, Kate and Leisha always make time for the important things in life:

instagram.com


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The Supreme Court Just Took A Major Same-Sex Wedding Cake Case

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Brennan Linsley / AP

The Supreme Court on Monday announced it would hear the case of a Christian baker in Colorado who refused to make a wedding cake for a gay couple, teeing up the country's highest stakes legal showdown about whether laws that protect LGBT people from discrimination can violate religious people's constitutional rights.

The justices granted certiorari to hear the case, Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, in its next term, which begins in October.

Since same-sex couples won the right to marry, in states and later nationwide, conservative activists have doubled down on lawsuits and legislation that promote religious freedom. They argue that providing wedding-related services to same-sex couples amounts to participating in the ceremonies, thereby violating their rights to religious exercise and free speech.

Bakers, florists, and photographers are selling creative services, the activists say, and cannot be forced into artistic expression.

While it remains legal in many parts of the US to turn away gay couples from businesses, 21 states ban discrimination in public settings on the basis of sexual orientation, including Colorado. If a business bakes wedding cakes for straight couples, the thinking goes, nondiscrimination laws require they must provide the same service to gay couples.

In July of 2012, Charlie Craig and David Mullins attempted to order a wedding cake from Masterpiece Cakeshop in Lakewood, but owner Jack Phillips declined, saying that it would violate his religious beliefs.

“I’ll make you birthday cakes, shower cakes, sell you cookies and brownies, I just don’t make cakes for same-sex weddings," court records say Phillips told the men.

Brennan Linsley / AP

Represented by the ACLU, the couple filed a complaint with the Colorado Civil Rights Commission, which found in 2014 the baker ran afoul of the state law banning discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. A Colorado appeals court upheld that decision, saying that if the baker "wishes to operate as a public accommodation and conduct business within the State of Colorado, [the ColoradoAnti-Discrimination Act] prohibits it from picking and choosing customers based on their sexual orientation."

The court added the law "does not impose burdens on religious conduct not imposed on secular conduct."

The state supreme court declined to take the case.

Phillips, who is represented by the Christian advocacy legal group Alliance Defending Freedom, then asked the US Supreme Court to accept the case, which it did on Monday.

The Alliance Defending Freedom is also representing a florist in Washington State who turned away a gay couple seeking flowers for their wedding. The state supreme court ruled against the florist in February and her lawyers have pledged to appeal to the Supreme Court.

The high court had been pondering whether to green-light the Colorado case for months, declining to take action during its weekly reviews. At least four of the justices were needed to accept the case.

The case asks: "Whether applying Colorado’s public accommodations law to compel Phillips to create expression that violates his sincerely held religious beliefs about marriage violates the Free Speech or Free Exercise Clauses of the First Amendment."

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