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35 Life Experiences Every Lesbian Knows All Too Well

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I still don’t know what a “lesbian haircut” is.

Twitter: @lesbiyonce

1. You’ve definitely experienced the crippling disappointment that comes from having a crush on a straight girl.
2. At some point, someone has said to you “you’re a lesbian? But you’re so pretty!”
3. If you’re femme, they’ll be like “wow! You don’t even have a lesbian haircut!”
4. And if you’re dating a girl who is also a femme, you have to deal with the whole “gal pal” misconception.
5. Sometimes you feel like there’s a very small supply of lesbians, to the point where every queer girl you meet has dated another girl you know.
6. And your Tinder has run out of fresh girls.

@downwiththelgbt_q / Via instagram.com

7. You know the struggle that comes with trying to flirt with someone you're pretty sure is gay.
8. Because you want it to seem like you’re flirting, not just complimenting them in a normal, friendship sorta way.
9. So you’re like “should I act more ‘gay’ so they know?” despite knowing that’s total bs.
10. And you’ve also faced the “do I want to look like her or do I want to have sex with her” dilemma.


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A Man Tried To Reclaim The Rainbow And Gay Twitter Did Not Hold Back

Australia Post Unknowingly Handed Out Anti-Gay Flyers With Nazi Imagery

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Supplied

Australia Post unwittingly delivered anti-gay flyers with Nazi imagery to homes in Victoria, before realising what was inside the envelopes and urgently pulling the delivery.

The flyer, titled The Death Of Reason...and the rainbow walk to insanity!, shows a digitally-altered image of rainbow flags in Sydney's Taylor Square merged with a building displaying Nazi swastika flags.

It was distributed in white envelopes titled "The Rainbow of Reason" to houses in Melbourne's St Kilda, and the regional Victorian town Shepparton – both home to a substantive and vocal LGBTI community.

The lengthy text on the flyer makes several comparisons between Nazi propaganda and the LGBTI community, rails against consumerism and invasions of privacy, and ends with a call to God.

"So Hitler's invasion of the personal privacy of children in the 1930's [sic] is the same totalitarian invasive influence of today," the flyer reads.

"He used the same means, only now the pornography of power that is state propaganda has morphed from Nazi political perversion into perverted gay activism for abnormal ‘marriage’ equality."

An Australia Post spokesperson told BuzzFeed News: "As soon as we became aware of the contents of this flyer, we immediately withdrew it from distribution from our delivery network because it is against our terms and conditions."

The flyer directs readers to a website that claims to be a "handbook for Christian radicals". It contains several downloadable flyers and posters on various topics, including LGBTI rights, the internet, Israel, Charles Darwin and atheism.

The man behind the flyer is Adelaide street preacher Kevin Bickle, who runs the website along with other street preachers. He told BuzzFeed News the flyers were a “personal effort” rather than the work of an organisation.

"We weren’t trying to be controversial, but we knew it wouldn’t be popular," he said.

Bickle said he originally commissioned Australia Post to deliver 60,000 of the flyers last week, but was contacted earlier this week saying they wouldn’t be delivered anymore. He declined to comment on how much he had spent on the flyers.

It is understood the flyers were delivered as part of the Unaddressed Mail Service (UMS) through which people and organisations pay to have unaddressed material delivered to homes in a certain area.

The UMS terms of services require all text and images in the items delivered to meet "acceptable community standards of reasonableness, honesty and decency".

Australia Post reserves the right to refuse to deliver anything which doesn't meet those standards or that is defamatory or offensive.

Bickle told BuzzFeed News: "We’re talking against homosexuality, but not against the homosexuals."

"The tract is not a simile between LGBT people and Naziism. I would never do that. It’s just a look at the means by which consumerism promotes things through mass media that extrapolates the effects in our day and age."

"You actually have to read it. You have to spend 15 minutes reading it and soaking it up. It’s not by any means a quick look at and say ‘this is unsuitable’. You have to actually read it and let it sink in."

"To be honest with you, I could not see any other way of making it simplified."

Bickle said St Kilda and Shepparton were not targeted for their LGBTI presence, and the flyer is also slated for distribution in "at least four other areas". He declined to name the suburbs or towns.

Chair of the Jewish civil rights group the Anti-Defamation Commission, Dvir Abramovich, told BuzzFeed News he had been contacted by Australia Post with an apology on Friday after he spoke out publicly against the flyers.

In an email to Abramovich seen by BuzzFeed News, an Australia Post staff member wrote that that the content of the flyers had initially gone unnoticed as they were inside envelopes.

"It shocks the conscience that such virulently anti-gay rhetoric has invaded the homes of residents in Melbourne, promoting its message of hate and exploiting the Holocaust to demonise the LGBTQI community and those supporting marriage equality," Abramovich said.

"Imagine the fear and intimidation a young person will feel after being confronted with such repulsive slurs."

Damien Stevens, a Shepparton resident and publicity officer for local LGBTI group Goulburn Valley Pride, told BuzzFeed News he received one of the "appalling" flyers in his letterbox earlier this week.

"The content is shocking, the content is appalling, it's disgusting, it's hateful, it's inaccurate," he said. "The very small amount of people who will take the time to read it will hopefully see the information for the rubbish that it is."

Stevens said he'd spoken to people in Shepparton who had also received the mail directly from the postman, or in with their normal mail – as opposed to a regular "junk mail" drop.

"The feel is that it was an Australia Post delivery, not junk mail," he said.

Stevens added that such flyers only served to invigorate Shepparton's vibrant LGBTI community.

"Shepparton has worked so hard for 20 years to ensure we have an inclusive, supporting, caring community. We're very proud of what's happening here and this kind of material only continues to inspire our efforts."

Meet The Feminist Wrestlers Of London Who Make "GLOW" Look Tame

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Loud, fearless, and unapologetically feminist — that is how founder Emily Read describes the women of London's all-female EVE wrestling group.

In the wake of the popularity of Netflix series GLOW, which tells the story of the formation of a female wrestling group in the 1980s, BuzzFeed News set out to discover what the real world of women's wrestling was like.

Once — and in some circles still — considered just eye-candy or a "piss break" for the men, for EVE women's wrestling is more than just entertainment: It is a movement.

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Leah Owens

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

EVE wrestling is run by Emily and her husband Dann, who have been in the promoting industry for 17 years. They started EVE together after Emily, who has bipolar disorder and is a mother of two children, had a mental breakdown and was sectioned under the Mental Health Act, causing her to lose her home and job. She tells BuzzFeed News she wanted to be an advocate for women and mental health issues following her recovery.

Emily had worked in the industry for many years and said "sexism runs rife through professional wrestling". Women's wrestling has "historically being promoted as solely 'eye candy for the dads' with only one women's match on an 8–10 match show", she said.

EVE was created to "destroy the stereotype" that women couldn't wrestle, Emily added.

"When launching EVE we became the 'riot grrrls' of the wrestling world: feminist activists changing the perception of women being weak by literally showcasing their incredible strength through the unique art form of professional wrestling."

Kasey Owens

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Kasey Owens (left) and Charlie Morgan spar during warmup.

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Jayla Dark

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

The group currently runs two events over a weekend every six to eight weeks. In between there are practice sessions, training seminars with well-known women wrestlers, and trainee shows.

BuzzFeed News went along to EVE's most recent event to get a glimpse into the real world of women's wrestling. There were several matches scheduled for the evening, including one with professional Japanese wrestler Emi Sakura, who travelled to London especially for the event. The events are held at the Resistance Gallery in Bethnal Green, a subversive arts space known for hosting lucha libre shows, cabaret nights, and fetish events. When you enter for an EVE show the venue is a grungy and dimly lit space with the sound of female-led punk bands blasting away. The ring is in the centre of the room and the crowd can get right up against the ropes to watch the matches unfold.

"Wrestling shows have a unique energy and interaction between the wrestlers and the crowd. It's a mix of high drama and comedy, incredible athletic skills showcased along with engaging stories," Emily said.

"Contrary to popular belief there's no rehearsals before the day of the show. A number of times we have matches between people who have never even met until a few hours before show time. We'll then go through with the wrestlers what the objective of that day's matches are, what the stories are, whereabouts in the show they are, and what we need to include. From there the wrestlers will start to piece together an idea of key moments in their matches and start warming up and feeling out the ring itself as one wrestling ring can feel and respond differently to the other."

"We really only have one rule: 'Don't be a cunt.'"


Jayla Dark (right) vs Erin Angel

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Jayla Dark vs Erin Angel

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Emily stressed that EVE shows are about more than just the wrestling, and that the group are committed to creating a sexism-free and homophobia-free environment. "Our slogan of 'support your local girl gang' stretches further than simply female professional wrestling. We have also just begun featuring a cabaret or burlesque act slotted into the show too, and we have booked a female punk band for a future event. It's important to us that people understand empowered women empower other women. Ending the so-called 'girl hate' is important to us," she said.

"We really only have one rule: 'Don't be a cunt.' The importance of maintaining an all-inclusive and safe-space environment is paramount to us especially as we have a growing following within the LGBTQ+ community."

From left: "Voodoo Queen" Amarah, cabaret performer Lolo Brow, and Livvii Grace

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Leah Owens (left) vs "Coventry's Loudest" Jetta

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Jetta

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Japan's Emi Sakura vs Jinny "The Fashionista"

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

And while advocacy is a big part of why EVE exists, entertaining the audience is also just as important. "Wrestling is not a sport," Dann Read told BuzzFeed News. "The women are skilled and they are strong, but wrestling is overall a theatrical production. I write the stories for EVE and base them around the characters of our wrestlers. When you enter the venue for one of our shows you are walking into the EVE universe where you meet our characters and see their stories told."

He said the outlandish characters are one of the biggest parts of what makes wrestling so entertaining to watch. "The women develop their characters in several different ways. Sometimes, if you are part of a club, your manager will give you a character to perfect. But more commonly it's the individual themselves who creates their characters. In many cases the women just turn up the volume of their own personalities. But some will create completely different characters, with different backstories, to play as well."

"I love the whole aspect of it, the way you get so emotionally involved in the stories. They are like real-life superheroes."

Charlie Morgan (real name Yasmin Lander) is one of performers who has taken her own personality and amped it up for her character. The 25-year-old from Norwich, who has been wrestling for about seven years, grew up watching wrestling and decided aged 5 that she was going to perform herself one day. "I love the whole aspect of it, the way you get so emotionally involved in the stories. They are like real-life superheroes. I love how wrestling gives you the ability to have the crowd in the palm of your hand and it’s up to you to make them laugh or cry, or to love you or hate you," Morgan told BuzzFeed News.

"I’ve known about EVE since I’ve been involved in the business but I was based with a different company up in Norwich, which is where I live. But this year I changed my character and name because I wasn’t very comfortable with the character I had been given previously. I played a character called Penelope who came from a posh part of Cambridge, but it just wasn't me. Her look didn't make sense to who I was. So I decided to create someone who is more myself but really turned up the volume. That’s when I joined EVE. What the audience see is what you get with me. I am a tomboy, love my snapback, and if you don’t like me it doesn’t bother me. Those are the things I took when I created Charlie Morgan."

Charlie Morgan's opening promo

youtube.com

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Morgan chose to come out as gay during her opening promo at EVE's recent 15 July event. "Before coming out [in real life] I was so scared and worried and really valued what people thought of me and I didn’t want them to judge me, but as soon as I came out it was like a switch flicked. I felt so much more myself and stopped caring about what people thought of me," she told BuzzFeed News.

"When Dann approached me about coming out in the wrestling world I was a little taken aback, but then I got really pumped about it and wanted to see if it could help other people. I was over the moon. I just felt a massive adrenaline rush. I wanted the last word of my promo to be 'gay'. And after I said it there was this pause and silence and then a big cheer and ovation from the crowd. This is just Charlie Morgan being herself and I hope that encourages others to do the same."

Unfortunately for Morgan, the high of coming out before her match was overshadowed slightly when she broke her collarbone later on in the event. "It was nobody’s fault. It was a move I had done thousands of times and I flew into her and when we fell we landed on top of my shoulder. The weight of both our bodies fractured my collarbone. I heard it crunching and we both realised something had gone wrong. So we quickly finished up and I went off to get help. It’s extremely painful but I was just unlucky. This is my first major injury in the six or seven years I have been wrestling."

Sammii Jayne (left) vs Debbie Sharpe

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Sammii Jayne vs Debbie Sharpe

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Sammii Jayne vs Debbie Sharpe

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Dann told BuzzFeed News that interest in women's wrestling has grown significantly in recent years.

"We are planning to host a show in March next year, which will be the biggest all-female wrestling performance in Europe ever. EVE is growing substantially and there is definitely more interest in women’s wrestling now. We wanted to put on a big event on as a bit of a 'fuck you' to society. The US president is a sexist and we have a prime minister who says 'happy Pride' but then votes against things that will help LGBT people, so we want to show people we are here and what we stand for."

The popularity of Netflix's GLOW has also helped. English singer and actor Kate Nash, who appears in the series, is a big supporter of EVE. "Kate Nash comes to our shows and has been an awesome supporter. After she was cast in GLOW she saw our showreel on YouTube and reached out to us. And she’s been coming to our shows since. She even gets involved in the wrestling sometimes," Dann said.

Kate Nash (right) shared this picture from an EVE event on her Instagram.

Instagram / Kate Nash

Sammii Jayne vs Debbie Sharpe

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

Leah Owens

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

"Women's wrestling is about so much more than just the show," Emily added. "Being that female wrestlers are not afforded the same opportunities as their male counterparts, we run all-female professional wrestling live events showcasing their talent and providing a much needed platform for female performing wrestlers without limits or restrictions.

"As a former trainee wrestler then wrestling promoter, I was very aware of the sexism within the wrestling business. When I became a mother it further cemented my drive to make changes to the business, a business that my husband was still a part of, as I never wanted my children to grow up seeing women as 'less than'.

"My husband and I had and still have that drive and ability to contribute making and enforcing a real change, which we have most certainly had a hand in doing, although there is still a long way to go."

Mohamed Abdulle for BuzzFeed News

EVE wrestling will hold its next event on Saturday 12 August at the Resistance Gallery in Bethnal Green, east London. Tickets are available at EVEwrestling.com

187 Masturbation Tips You'll Wish You'd Read Sooner

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You’ll be so glad you came. (Pun intended.)

Because let's be real, everyone is different and has their own preferences, which means there are a lot of questions out there. You could be wondering: How the hell do I orgasm? How do I know if my habits are ~normal~? What kind of sex toy do I buy? And, um, is there a safe way of doing things?

To help, we rounded up our top masturbation advice — from both experts and normal masturbation-loving people — so that you can make sure your body is getting the proper love and attention it deserves. Okay, get reading!

For some fascinating insight into all the different ways people take care of business:

For some fascinating insight into all the different ways people take care of business:

Like these very detailed practices:

"My favorite place to masturbate is in the shower with the shower head. I turn down the lights and start my shower hot so the bathroom is nice and steamy. I change my shower head setting so the flow is steadier and cooler. I keep that shower head on my clit. The pressure from it feels amazing and I can orgasm in less than five minutes. The best orgasms are the ones where I temporarily go blind and the shower head does just that."
—27/F/Straight

"I always take a super soft blanket and lay it down on my bed, usually folded a few times to make it thicker. Then I set up some porn on my laptop and just lay on my stomach with my dick against the blanket. Then I just move my hips back and forth or up and down so my dick would rub against the blanket until I orgasm! It kinda gives me the sensation of actual sex because I'm doing the movements with my body rather than using my hand."
—20/M/Gay

Check out 40 People Share What They Actually Do When They Masturbate for more.

Alice Mongkongllite / Via buzzfeed.com

For unconventional vaginal masturbation tips that could take your experience to the next level:

For unconventional vaginal masturbation tips that could take your experience to the next level:

Like these very doable words:

Replicate what's happening in whatever porn you're watching with your hands or toys.
"So if a woman is having sex, I'll time the thrusts of my vibe with the guy's, or if she's getting rimmed, I'll stroke my asshole."
—Anonymous, 26/F/Straight

If clitoral stimulation is usually too intense for you, circle around it instead.
—Anonymous, 26/F/Bisexual

Check out 25 Masturbation Techniques You Just Might Want To Steal for more.

NBC

For stimulating tips on how to keep your penis pleased:

For stimulating tips on how to keep your penis pleased:

Like these genius penal tips (pun intended):

Stimulate it ~sideways~ instead of up and down.
"Instead of gripping it and jerking like most guys, I lay my penis flat on my belly and rub it until I cum. Almost like rolling dough into a breadstick shape."
—24/Male/Gay

Try edging, or getting close to orgasm several times without actually letting yourself come.
"Try not to come too quick. When you feel it start to pop, STOP. Wait until things have calmed back down then do the whole thing three or four more times."
—27/Male

Check out 23 Ways To Make Jerking Off Even Better for more.

Twitter: @miguuelmata


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An Unsung Hero Of The AIDS Crisis Is Finally Getting The Spotlight

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Shay Astar in Ruth.

Zirkova/We Are One+Together/Rose McGowan/Anka Malatynska

The story of Ruth Coker Burks, an Arkansas woman who became an accidental AIDS caregiver and inadvertent activist, had been lost to history. Now, though, she is the subject of Ruth, a short film directed and written by Rose McGowan.

"I think she's been forgotten by time," McGowan told BuzzFeed News in a recent interview. "Ruth Coker Burks is a national hero. I hope she gets seen and treated that way in the future. I think it's time for strong women in history to rise up and be counted. And I'll do anything I can to help that along."

In 1984, according to a 2015 profile of Burks in the Arkansas Times, she was 25 and visiting a friend in the hospital when she heard nurses trying to avoid the room of a quarantined patient. Burks decided to go into the room herself, and found a young man wasting away from what turned out to be AIDS. The man told her he wanted to see his mother, but when Burks reported that to the nurses they said no one was going to come to visit him. Burks took it upon herself to call the patient's mother, who confirmed she had indeed rejected him.

vimeo.com

Burks stayed with the man until he died later that night. It was the beginning of a years-long run helping AIDS patients whose biological families had shunned them. She would take them to the doctor, and help with their medications. In the Arkansas Times story, Burks — a childhood friend of Bill Clinton's from Hot Springs, Arkansas — said, "I was their hospice. Their gay friends were their hospice. Their companions were their hospice."

McGowan's Ruth, which runs just under eight minutes, shows that inceptive moment for Burks. When the vodka company Zirkova — which is sponsoring a series of short films through its We Are One+Together nonprofit — approached McGowan to direct the project she hadn't heard of Burks. But as McGowan researched her she became "fascinated and captivated by the story." Though Zirkova had sent McGowan a script, she rewrote it during an all-nighter.

Zirkova/We Are One+Together/Rose McGowan/Anka Malatynska

After watching two nurses play Rock, Paper, Scissors to see who has to go check on the patient (Billy, played by Kyle Eastman), Ruth (played by Shay Astar) directly addresses the camera. "Sometimes family feuds make people do strange things, like buy up half a cemetery," she says to the audience. "I used to wonder what on earth I was going to do with my 262 plots my mother left me. I didn't have to wonder long." The real Burks would later bury the cremated bodies of men she had cared for.

Ruth breaking the fourth wall had an unlikely inspiration. "I kind of, believe it or not, was thinking of Ferris Bueller's Day Off," McGowan said with a laugh, noting that the technique, other than in House of Cards, is usually used in comedy. "I thought the most effective way to communicate what I was trying to say was to have her say it directly at the audience."

McGowan on the set of Ruth.

Courtesy of Rose McGowan

Ruth was shot in Los Angeles over a two-day period in June. McGowan said she cast Astar, a "cerebral actress," because "I needed somebody really smart." McGowan said: "I also wanted somebody kind of unusual looking who looked like they could be from a smaller town."

Admirers of McGowan's previous short film, Dawn, which was nominated for a Grand Jury prize at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival, will recognize the actor-turned-director's use of color. "I saw the color palette in my head and went from there," McGowan said. Ruth's dress is light pink, ruffled — and practically whimsical. "I thought, Just because she's in a small town doesn't mean she's a church lady," McGowan added. "So I found this pink outfit that was kind of great, and I wanted to juxtapose it with all the seriousness." As shot by cinematographer Anka Malatynska, the hospital corridor and Billy's room are in a dreamy haze; as Ruth stands at the foot of his bed, a golden light streams through the curtain of the window in the middle of the shot. When Ruth talks to the curt, judgmental nurse, and to Billy's cruel mother, McGowan shows them in sharp relief. "I like to use all sorts of tools — sound design, lighting, set design are all huge for me," McGowan said.

Kyle Eastman as Billy, and Shay Astar as Ruth.

Zirkova/We Are One+Together/Rose McGowan/Anka Malatynska

Since McGowan gave up acting in favor of a varied career — in addition to developing films and television she's been working on an album and a skin-care line, and her memoir, Brave, will be published by HarperOne in January — the common thread among the projects is clear to her: "Everything is based in activism," McGowan said. "That, to me, is the hubcap of the wheel of what I'm doing."

Ruth — which premiered on Sunday in Montauk, New York, to coincide with the kickoff of the 2017 International AIDS Conference in Paris — is a way for her to express ideas about the lasting consequences of AIDS in America. "I think we're at the place we're at culturally because so many creatives were wiped out by AIDS," McGowan said. "What we're left with is something kind of lacking. I don't think we reflect as a society on what we've lost — not just the individual toll, but the collective toll."

Rose McGowan Is Starting A Revolution

The Former Buddhist Monk Who Is Now A Tibetan Queer Icon

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Taklha

Tenzin Mariko thought she would be quickly booed offstage when she decided to make her first public appearance as a performer at the 2015 Miss Tibet pageant in Dharamsala. Her apprehension stemmed from the fact that she is the first openly transgender woman in the Tibetan community.

Mariko, a former Buddhist monk, had been the subject of much ridicule only the previous year, when a video of her – dancing unabashedly at a friend’s wedding in New Delhi, wearing women’s clothing and a wig – had gone viral amongst the Tibetan community on WeChat.

Having been identified as the person in the clip— a suggestion she vehemently denied at the time— she was berated by people in Dharamsala, her hometown, for what they deemed “improper conduct” and unbefitting a Tibetan Buddhist monk. Some called her insulting names, including “Pholo-molo,” a derogatory Tibetan term for transgender that translates as “neither male nor female”. Neighbours reproached her parents for not being wary of their child’s activities.

Mariko is perhaps the biggest star in a community that, until her arrival, had been bereft of LGBT idols.

A year later, she was standing in front of the same crowd, dressed in a long green skirt, a sleeveless white top and heels, no longer wanting to hide. Having officially given up monkhood and revealed to close friends and family that she was transgender a few months earlier, she wanted to come out to the wider Tibetan community. And she was going to do it through dance.

She was nervous but ready. Surprisingly, so was the audience.

“I thought I was going to get hit with eggs and tomatoes,” says Mariko. She danced to a medley of Bollywood hits at the beauty pageant. “As soon as I stepped onto the stage, the entire venue burst into cheers. Everyone was screaming ‘once more’ when my performance ended. I felt good that night. I felt relieved.”

Mariko, 20, is an aspiring makeup artist and dancer, and perhaps the biggest star in a community that, until her arrival, had been bereft of LGBT idols.

She was born Tenzin Ugen, the fourth of five sons, to Tsering Gonpo and Chime Yangzom, in Bir, a village in Himachal Pradesh. Both her parents worked as teachers at the local Tibetan school. When she was 9, she was sent to Samdrup Darjay Choling Monastery in Darjeeling with her younger brother. Four years later, the two were transferred to Tergar Institute in Kathmandu, Nepal, for higher monastic studies. At 16, she left the monastery and returned to Dharamsala, where her father and her stepmother were living. Her parents had separated and her mother continued to live in Bir. That’s when she slowly began to transition.

Taklha

As a child, she recalls, she would often steal her mother’s makeup and put on her clothes — antics that didn’t go down well with her parents. Even as a monk, she says, she didn’t stop trying to look feminine. Using cheap powder to whiten her face and lip balm to shine her lips, she says, she stood out in a sea of monks.

“Other monks used to call me ‘ani’ (the Tibetan word for nun),” says Mariko. “I didn’t care. I loved makeup, and I used to come up with all sorts of silly excuses to justify wearing it.”

She gave up monkhood in 2014 shortly after her video scandal. Although her family initially disapproved of her choice to transition, they eventually came around.

“My father used to tell me, ‘You were born a boy, so you need to act like one,’” says Mariko. “But I would tell him, ‘I don’t want to live like a boy anymore. I want to be a girl.’”

“It feels good to be known as the first Tibetan transgender,” she adds. “Not because it has turned me into some sort of celebrity amongst the Tibetan people, but because I have, in a small way, made it easier for other trans people to come forward.”

Today, thousands of young Tibetans follow Mariko on social media— 22,000 in all across Facebook and Instagram. But it’s not only socially liberal youths who have embraced her.

Prominent Tibetan organisations, including the Tibetan Women’s Association and the Tibetan Youth Congress, have invited her to speak at their programs. She’s a regular fixture at Tibetan events and has performed all across India, where elderly Tibetans usually make up half her audience.

“I really admire her courage,” says Tsewang Dolma, information secretary at the Dharamsala-based Tibetan Youth Congress, which campaigns for Tibet’s independence from China and has over 30,000 members worldwide. “She’s an inspiration, not only to the trans people in the community, but to all Tibetans.”

“It feels good to be known as the first Tibetan transgender... because I have, in a small way, made it easier for other trans people to come forward.”

Perhaps the most striking evidence of her acceptance by the Tibetan community has been the response of its religious leaders – the top echelons of this deeply religious society. In just the last two years, she’s been granted private audiences with a host of eminent Tibetan Buddhist leaders, including Karmapa, the second highest-ranking guru in Tibetan Buddhism after the Dalai Lama.

“I feel blessed, truly blessed,” says Mariko via a video call from Kathmandu, where she has been invited to perform at a Tibetan show, her 10th such engagement of the month. “I recently had a chance to meet with Tsoknyi Rinpoche, and he told me that I was doing good work and that he supported me,” referring to an important lama of the Drukpa Kagyu and Nyingma lineages.

Even Mariko doesn’t have an explanation for what changed people’s perception towards her. She thinks people warmed up to her because she gave up monkhood. She believes that people were upset earlier because they felt she was disrespecting her monastic vows by cross-dressing — that they didn’t have a problem with her being transgender, but with transitioning while still wearing a monk’s robes.

That explanation may be overly generous, given that a majority of trans and gay people still remain closeted and invisible in the Tibetan public sphere. And while Buddhist leaders have acknowledged Mariko and offered her their blessings, it is also true that the word transgender has always had a negative connotation in Buddhist texts.

Tashi Ganden, a Tibetan researcher and a former monk himself, points to a 13th century Tibetan dictionary that defines maning, the Tibetan word for transgender, as “a person who has defects with his/her sexual organs”.

“This definition is borrowed from other religious texts and conveys the negativism that’s associated with trans people,” says Ganden.

Ganden says the requirement to declare oneself a non-maning before joining a monastery also shows the discriminatory attitude of the monasteries towards transgender people.

The Dalai Lama, who holds much sway over Tibetan people’s views on any given issue, has not publicly denounced same-sex relationships. But in a 2014 interview with American TV and radio host Larry King, he noted that each religion has different definitions of sexual misconduct and believers should not engage in such acts.

Takla

For Mariko though, family support is more important than community.

“I think people are more afraid of how their families are going to react than the community,” she says. “Fortunately, my family has been supportive.”

Despite being teased by other monks about her appearance, Mariko doesn’t look back at her time at the monastery with bitterness. In fact, she credits her experience as a monk with turning her into the person she is today.

“I learnt how to be a good person at the monastery,” she says. “Had I not been a monk, I would not be the mature, sensible person that I am today.”

These days she spends most of her time jetting across India, performing at live shows, mostly in Tibetan settlements. Although she won’t reveal how much she is paid per show, she says she makes enough money to lead a comfortable life and support her family financially.

Maning, the Tibetan word for transgender, is defined as “a person who has defects with his/her sexual organs.”

Besides dance, Mariko is passionate about makeup and styling. Last year she completed a short-term makeup course at the Make-Up Designory (MUD) Studio in New Delhi and says she aspires to make a name for herself in the fashion industry.

Scroll down her Instagram page, and it is easy to see the level of care she puts into her appearance. There isn’t a single post where she’s shabbily dressed or badly styled. Even for a video interview, Mariko was dressed to perfection in an off-shoulder mini-dress by a Tibetan designer which she accessorized with golden hoops.

She admits there are times when she doesn’t want to get dressed up and would rather go out barefaced but says she has to think about her fans, who have certain expectations.

“People are excited when they see me,” she says, “and I don’t want to disappoint them by looking like someone who’s different from the way Mariko looks on social media.”

While she has outwardly transitioned, Mariko says she doesn’t take any hormones. She says she’s naturally been blessed with feminine features, and with no doctor to consult, she is afraid of the side effects taking random pills would have on her body. She does, however, want to undergo gender reassignment surgery but will wait until she can afford it, she says.

Asked if she dreams of participating in a beauty pageant, as many of her friends have, she replies with her trademark sassiness.

“Being Mariko, I have already received so much attention, love and fans,” she says. “I don’t think I can handle another crown.”

Tsering D Gurung is a freelance journalist based in New York City. Follow her on Twitter @TseringDolkerG

A Postal Vote On Same-Sex Marriage Would Under-Represent Younger Voters, Experts Warn

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ABC TV

The ABC panel show Q&A had its customary last-minute question on same-sex marriage Monday night – but for the first time, it was a panel of high school students offering their thoughts on an issue that has been a focus for debate in Australia for years.

Self-described "country kid" Jock Maddern said he had chatted about the issue with his mum prior to the show, and believed it shouldn't matter who you love. Year 12 student Jacinta Speer, who has interned in Bill Shorten's office, said it was clear that Australians wanted marriage equality and that the government's proposed national vote would be "detrimental to all of us".

Aspiring journalist Pinidu Chandrasekera, from North Melbourne, delivered a passionate defence of the plebiscite: "When you're doing something as fundamental as changing the definition of marriage, there is no going back. Once you do it, that's it. And I think everyone has to have a say on this."

Indigenous activist Aretha Brown said the debate hits "close to home" for her.

"To think there's certain people out there that don't have the same rights as a person sitting next to you, this is supposed to be Australia in the 21st century," she said. "Yet, I couldn't marry someone if I really loved them. I think that's...we say we're progressive but I'm kind of, left kind of broken when I think about it."

The question on same-sex marriage drew enthusiastic applause from the high school audience.

ABC TV

But experts say it is precisely the voices of people such as Maddern, Chandrasekera, Speer and Brown that are likely to be overshadowed in a postal vote on same-sex marriage currently floated by some government MPs.

A postal plebiscite could be held without legislation – allowing the government to circumvent the Senate, which blocked the plebiscite last year. However, without legislation, the vote could not be made compulsory like a usual election or referendum in Australia. Like a compulsory plebiscite, it would not be binding on the parliament.

The proposal has been floated in previous months, but is now subject to a serious push from Queensland senator Barry O'Sullivan. It's also received support from immigration minister Peter Dutton and former prime minister Tony Abbott.

The support for same-sex marriage from three of the four young Q&A panelists, along with the student questioner, and a significant chunk of the applauding audience, is in line with polling showing very high support for same-sex marriage among young people.

The most recent Essential poll showed 81% of respondents aged 18-24 in support, compared with 61% of all respondents and 46% of those aged 65 and older.

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Ian McAllister, professor of political science at the Australian National University, told BuzzFeed News that the voluntary and postal nature of the vote would "introduce biases" in the result and see younger people under-represented.

"We know that those voters [who will not take part in a compulsory vote] tend to be younger voters, voters who are less interested, less educated, slightly more likely to be female," he said. "We know that when things are conducted by post it will over-emphasise voting by older people."

He estimated the percentage of Australians who would actually vote in such a plebiscite in the low 70s, based on data from the long-term Australian Election Study and the fact it would be a "second order election" (meaning a vote on an issue, rather than on electing representatives).

McAllister said a postal plebiscite would show greater opposition to same-sex marriage than actually exists.

"In a non-compulsory, postal plebiscite, you are going to overestimate opposition to same-sex marriage. That is absolutely true," he said.

"Not as much as people might think though, it’s not huge. If it happened to be an extremely close result, it would affect the outcome."

McAllister predicted a vote could overestimate opposition to same-sex marriage by three or four percent.

Student and Indigenous activist Aretha Brown on Monday's Q&A.

ABC TV

Clive Bean, professor of political science at the Queensland University of Technology, told BuzzFeed News young people are "much less likely" to respond to a postal vote, and that it could influence the result.

"I would certainly see [young people's response rates] as a factor that would make a possibility of biasing the result – relative to what you would get in a comprehensive plebiscite if the response was equal from all different sectors of society."

Bean said it would become a "real issue" if it became clear that there were substantially different views between an under-represented group of voters and the remainder.

He said a voluntary survey would likely not put to rest the deep divisions over this issue.

"What it will mean, if something like that went ahead and then it were used as the basis for a policy decision and the results were relatively close, it would become highly contentious," Bean said. "The danger is, it might not get them much further than they are now."


Which Lesbian Television Sex Scene Always Gets You Hot And Bothered?

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Don’t lie, you’ve got your favorite.

Seeing queer women on television is becoming less of a rarity — thank goodness.

Seeing queer women on television is becoming less of a rarity — thank goodness.

netflix

Which means we get more of those, um, you know — really steamy scenes too.

Which means we get more of those, um, you know — really steamy scenes too.

Showtime

And those steamy scenes? They still feel like a victory when we actually get to see them.

And those steamy scenes? They still feel like a victory when we actually get to see them.

lesbian-aesthetic-tho.tumblr.com

For example, Bo and Lauren's sexcapades on Lost Girl took things to new heights on so many occasions — it's hard to pick just one specific scene, really.

For example, Bo and Lauren's sexcapades on Lost Girl took things to new heights on so many occasions — it's hard to pick just one specific scene, really.

Showcase


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15 Questions You've Probably Been Asked If You're The Only Gay Guy In Your Office

Here's What Trans Veterans Are Saying About Trump's Trans Military Ban

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“I, a trans person, have done more for the defense of America than Trump ever will.”

President Trump tweeted on Wednesday morning that transgender people cannot "serve in any capacity in the U.S. Military."

President Trump tweeted on Wednesday morning that transgender people cannot "serve in any capacity in the U.S. Military."

"Our military must be focused on decisive and overwhelming victory and cannot be burdened with the tremendous medical costs and disruption that transgender in the military would entail," he said in a series of tweets.

Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images


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This Transgender Veteran Has A Message For Trump

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Nicholas Kamm / AFP / Getty Images

Kristin Beck spent 20 years in the Navy: She served in Afghanistan, Iraq, and racked up awards for her bravery, including the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star with Valor. She also came out as a transgender woman in 2013.

This morning, when she saw that President Donald Trump had tweeted that transgender people like her will no longer be allowed to serve in the military, her initial reaction was disbelief.

"There are a bunch of WTFs. This doesn’t make any sense," the retired Navy SEAL told BuzzFeed News. "This upsets a lot of people and I think it’s a surprise to a lot of folks."

Trump's tweets came weeks after the House narrowly voted against a bill that would have denied transgender service members gender transition-related medical care.

The president's tweets suggest that spending on health care for transgender service members was one of the considerations in making his decision — that amount is actually only a small percentage of overall military health care spending (between $2.4 million and $8.4 million of a total $49.3 billion in fiscal year 2014, according to this study).

Beck says blaming health care costs is not a legitimate justification for excluding trans people.

"That’s a cop-out. It’s something else because the money was really not that much. Medical costs for transgender people are the equivalent of one price of one wheel of a fighter…it’s a leadership problem, take care of your people," she said.

Beck is a well-respected Navy SEAL veteran whose story gained wider visibility when, in 2014, documentarians Sandrine Orabona and Mark Herzog made a feature documentary about her life as a transgender woman and leader in the military. Beck says Trump and his team in the White House would do well to watch the film and educate themselves about both trans people and the military.

"The problem is education and if you watch that film there will definitely be a little bit of enlightenment of what’s going on," she said. "Watch that film before you start throwing out accusations and anything else."

New York Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney issued this statement this morning referring to Beck as an example of the value of including transgender people in the military:

“Anyone who doubts the lethality of our trans service members should say that to Kristin Beck’s face — she’s a transgender member of SEAL Team 6, a veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan, and a Bronze Star and Purple Heart recipient.”

Beck says the move is "a mistake" — one that she hopes will galvanize the military and transgender communities against Trump in the coming elections.

"We have a huge community and he just empowered the community. He gave the community one flag to join under. One tweet changed the elections in 2018. It changed the presidential race in 2020," she said. "We’re going to rise up, change the landscape of America."

"This is about America. If you can take one word to describe America, it's 'liberty.' You’re taking for granted that liberty and you’re also saying that liberty only applies to you and doesn’t apply to me," she said.

And she wants to say this to the thousands of active serving transgender members in the military right now: "Don’t panic. People are working on it, and it’s going to be okay."

LINK: Trump Says Transgender People Cannot "Serve In Any Capacity" In The Military

Meet The Transgender Veteran Who Created The Trans Pride Flag

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“What Trump did was strictly to serve his bigot followers and nothing else,” said Navy veteran Monica Helms — who created the trans pride flag — in response to Trump’s decision to bar transgender people from the military.

This is Monica Helms, the creator of the trans pride flag. She's also a veteran who served in the Navy from 1970 to 1978.

This is Monica Helms, the creator of the trans pride flag. She's also a veteran who served in the Navy from 1970 to 1978.

Monica Helms

"What Trump did was strictly to serve his bigot followers and nothing else," she told BuzzFeed News. "Trans people have proven to serve well and without any issues, both in our country and several throughout the world."

It remains uncertain what impact Trump's decision will have on the estimated 15,000 or more transgender troops currently serving in the armed forces.

Earlier this month, BuzzFeed News and Transilient visited Helms at her home in Marietta, Georgia.

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She explained that the idea for the trans pride flag came to her in 1999, after she spoke with the creator of the bisexual pride flag, Michael Page.

She explained that the idea for the trans pride flag came to her in 1999, after she spoke with the creator of the bisexual pride flag, Michael Page.

Facebook: video.php


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A Landmark Lawsuit About An Intersex Baby’s Genital Surgery Just Settled For $440,000

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M.C.

SPLC / interACT

After four years in court, a first-of-its-kind legal battle over operating on “intersex” babies who are born with ambiguous genitalia has finally settled for $440,000, according to court records made public on Wednesday.

The lawsuit was brought by Pam and Mark Crawford on behalf of their adopted son, M.C., against the Medical University of South Carolina, where M.C.’s genital surgery was performed when he was 16 months old. South Carolina Department of Social Services, which technically had custody of M.C. at the time, and Greenville Hospital System, who referred him to surgeons at MUSC, were also named in the suit. Greenville settled for $20,000 last year. (MUSC will pay $270,000 to a structured settlement company, which will purchase an annuity policy that will pay M.C. a total of $440,000 over the next 16 years.)

The Crawfords alleged that M.C. — who was operated on to look like a girl, but grew up to identify as a boy — has incurred medical bills, pain and suffering, psychological damage, and impairment as a result of the surgery. MUSC “denied all claims of negligence and any liability for the alleged claims but agreed to this compromise of a vigorously disputed claim to avoid the costs of litigation,” according to the settlement.

The case has been closely watched by intersex researchers and advocates, who say it’s the first to openly challenge intersex surgeries on babies. Although some scientists are wary of using the court system to challenge the standard of care in medicine, advocates say it’s become their only option.

”It’s the only lawsuit we’re aware of that’s become public at all,” Bo Laurent, who founded the Intersex Society of North America and testified in M.C.’s case, told BuzzFeed News. “More and more, surgeons are going to realize that they’re at risk of these suits. Nobody can say this was uncontroversial standard practice. It is controversial.”

M.C., now 12 years old, was born with a condition called “ovotesticular disorder of sexual development,” which at birth included a 2-centimeter penis, a small vaginal opening, both ovarian and testicular tissue, and high blood testosterone levels. Although doctors initially said that “either sex of rearing” would be possible, they eventually operated on the baby to make the genitalia appear more female, removing the penis and testicular tissue.

M.C. was adopted by the Crawfords when he was almost 2. By age 7, he identified as a boy. His parents sued the surgeons who operated on him, alleging that they did not do enough to convey the risks of the surgery as well as other options to his legal guardians at the time.

Roughly 1 in every 2,000 babies in the U.S. are born, like M.C., with “differences in sexual development”: chromosomes, gonads, or genitalia that don’t fit in the neat categories of “boy” and “girl.” Some doctors estimate that the number of these intersex babies may be closer to 1 in 100.

Since the 1960s, standard medical practice has been to operate on the infants to make their genitalia appear more typically male or female and attempt to ensure a more normal social life for the children into adulthood. But since the 1990s, a growing number of adult intersex activists have been speaking out against the surgeries, saying that they are medically unnecessary, physically damaging, and psychologically harmful. In some cases, such as M.C.’s, surgeons risk operating on an infant who grows up to identify with a different gender than what was assigned to them in the operating room.

InterACT, one of the advocacy groups that provided the Crawfords with legal counsel, confirmed that the case had been “resolved and dismissed with no admission of liability or wrongdoing.” A MUSC statement said the same, adding that "the Parties agreed that it was mutually beneficial to amicably resolve this case."

The settlement comes the same week as a 160-page report by Human Rights Watch — in collaboration with interACT — condemning the surgeries. In June, a report by three former US surgeons general concluded: “Cosmetic genitoplasty should be deferred until children are old enough to voice their own view about whether to undergo the surgery.” And in 2013, the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture called on countries to outlaw "genital-normalizing" surgeries on intersex individuals.

For some doctors, however, settling the question at the level of the UN or in courtrooms sets a dangerous precedent for patient care.

“We should be following the evidence,” David Sandberg, professor in pediatrics at the University of Michigan told BuzzFeed News. Sandberg is the coinvestigator of a research initiative across several hospitals to try to better understand outcomes of patients with differences of sexual development.

“When we sort of punt from one area to another — from the domain of health care to the courts — I’m always worried that we’re not going to get it right,” he said.

Several studies have shown mixed satisfaction among intersex adults who underwent genital surgery as infants. Similarly, the handful of studies looking at the psychological well-being of intersex adults who didn’t get surgery offer no clear answer. Some studies found no significant difference in quality of life compared with those who don’t have intersex conditions, whereas others show disparities in social measures like education, employment, and marriage.

“I never question people's experiences,” Sandberg said. “What I do question is whether their experiences are generalizable to others. I don’t know who said it, but I’d agree with the quote ‘The plural of anecdote is not data.’”

For Laurent, whose life has been personally impacted by the decision to operate, that answer is not satisfactory.

What percentage of people is it okay to impose M.C.’s outcome on — or my outcome on — when we know that people can be okay without surgery?” Laurent said. “If this disastrous outcome is one of the ways this turns out, and we have no evidence these surgeries are necessary, then I think there’s no justification for continuing to impose them when people can’t choose.”

LINK: Should Doctors Operate On Intersex Babies?

Tech CEOs Are Calling For Trump To Let Trans Service Members Stay In The Military

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Transgender former US Navy Seal Senior Chief Kristin Beck speaks at an ACLU conference, Oct. 20, 2014.

Nicholas Kamm / AFP / Getty Images

On Wednesday morning, President Trump tweeted that transgender individuals wouldn't be allowed to serve in the US military "in any capacity."

He made the statements ostensibly after consulting with military experts about the medical cost and "disruption" trans people would cause in the armed forces.

The statements, if turned into law, would be a reversal of the Obama administration's policies, which allowed trans members to serve, offered assistance for their transitions, and obligated soldiers to undergo diversity training on working with trans people. There is no official policy in place rejecting trans service members yet, but two trans recruits, one from West Point and the other from the Air Force Academy, were denied their commissioning into the military in May.

In response, Silicon Valley CEOs and companies have been making statements on social media that advocate for allowing trans people to keep serving in the military.

Some are using the hashtag #LetThemServe.

Google

Facebook

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Microsoft's president and chief legal officer

Airbnb

Uber

Grindr

Instagram: @grindr

Reddit

A Reddit spokesperson said in a statement, "We stand with our trans users—many of whom are members of the military—and hope that Reddit can continue to offer a platform to amplify their voices."

The company pointed to users in the forum r/IAmA, who hosted an "Ask Me Anything" Q&A with transgender West Point graduate Riley Dosh on July 16. Users in the forum r/science are in the middle of hosting AMAs with researchers and doctors who study transgender-specific healthcare. The first one was on Monday. There are a number of forums on Reddit created by users dedicated to breaking down stereotypes of transgender life and to building community among trans people (r/MtF, r/FtM, and r/transpositive).

In response to questions about the ban, Lyft said, "Lyft will always stand for inclusion and acceptance. It's central to who we are and the world we are working to create."

Snapchat and Yelp declined to comment. Amazon, IBM, Spotify Adobe, Oracle, Tesla, Palantir, Dell, and HP did not immediately respond to requests for comment or make posts on social media. We will update the story with comments as we receive them.

Some of the first CEOs to respond to Trump's tweets were those who did not attend his technology roundtable in June. The CEOs of Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Google's founder Eric Schmidt did attend that meeting.

The ACLU pointed out that Trump's tweets do not constitute an official change in policy.

They are, however, a dramatic change in sentiment from the previous administration.

Caroline O'Donovan contributed to this report.


Caitlyn Jenner Questioned Trump's Trans Military Ban On Twitter And People Weren't Having It

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“What happened to your promise to fight for them?”

On July 26, Donald Trump tweeted that "the United States Government will not accept or allow transgender individuals to serve in any capacity in the U.S. Military."

On July 26, Donald Trump tweeted that "the United States Government will not accept or allow transgender individuals to serve in any capacity in the U.S. Military."

Drew Angerer / Getty Images

Jenner has been an outspoken Trump supporter. On a 2016 episode of her E! series, I Am Cait, Jenner said, "He would be really good for women's issues."

Jenner has been an outspoken Trump supporter. On a 2016 episode of her E! series, I Am Cait, Jenner said, "He would be really good for women's issues."

Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images


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Elderly Lesbians Will Hold Hands On A Tram To Celebrate Lesbian Resistance

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In 1976, two women were convicted of "offensive behaviour" for holding hands on a tram in Melbourne, Australia.

The fate of the women is unknown, but their story shot from queer folklore to an issue of fleeting national interest when it was mentioned in Victorian premier Daniel Andrews' apology to people convicted of unjust historical laws against homosexual acts.

Now, the journey will be replicated by a number of older lesbians in a project titled 'Tram', aimed at celebrating lesbian resistance.

The project is being run by Alice's Garage, a self-funded national program promoting healthy LGBTI ageing and empowering LGBTI elders, in partnership with photographer Lisa White and Switchboard Victoria.

Alice's Garage director Catherine Barrett told BuzzFeed News the project was about identifying the specific challenges faced by lesbians in Australian history and telling their stories.

"LGBTI histories are often viewed collectively – but older lesbian’s experiences of homophobia were compounded by patriarchal views – and yet these women found ways to resist and survive," she said.

"The project is not just to recognise historic experiences of lesbophobia, but celebrate the resistance to them. Lesbians got through those terrible experiences."

The multi-pronged project will collect archival material on the experiences of older lesbians, as well as inviting them to share their stories and submit photos of themselves holding hands.

In October, a number of older lesbians will hold hands on a tram journey from the Melbourne CBD to St Kilda, the site of Victoria's new Pride Centre.

One of the stories Barrett wants to spread and celebrate is that of Hazel "Malloy" Rolfe, an 82-year-old lesbian who lives in an aged care facility in Campbelltown, South Australia.

Malloy realised she was a lesbian in 1954, when she was 19 and working at a telephone exchange in Adelaide.

She told BuzzFeed News it was a "scary" time, but the telephone exchange was a "haven for lesbians".

"Not many of them ever talked about it," she said. "It was a pretty taboo subject."

Asked how she knew the other women were lesbians if they didn't talk about it, she said: "One knows one by being one. It’s just a feeling."

After six years at the telephone exchange, during which time she had three girlfriends, Malloy went through a bad breakup and lost her job. She suffered a nervous breakdown, and ended up at Hillcrest Hospital (previously known as Northfield Mental Hospital), an Adelaide psychiatric institution that was closed in 1994.

Over the next eight years Malloy underwent various therapies for depression and to try and become straight, including electroconvulsive therapy and taking the drug LSD.

She said that she doesn't have much to do with younger lesbians these days, but a couple of decades ago when she was more involved with the community, people would often come up and talk to her about what she had gone through.

"Many of them came up to me and said I was courageous, they hoped they would never ever have to go through anything like that," she said.

"I would imagine 20 years on it becomes even easier for them."

Malloy (left) takes part in the Tram project with LGBTI advocate and aged care provider Robyn Burton.

Supplied

Malloy still comes up against anti-gay attitudes in her retirement village, but said the staff are very accepting.

"I’ll give you an incident," she said. "I went over to the nursing home to collect a meal for myself on Sunday night after I’d been to mass. I said to the nurses who were feeding two of the residents in the dining room that I’d been to this conference, and they said 'Who did you go with?'"

"I said, two lesbian friends took me. And they didn’t bat an eyelid. Forty years ago that may not have been the same story. Even then I felt slightly nervous saying that, that I’d get a reaction."

Malloy does come across older people who are homophobic, or who hold the view that it's OK to be a lesbian as long as you don't act on it.

"The only way I deal with them is to think that's their problem, not mine," Malloy, who is a devout Catholic, said. "All I say to them is I don’t see it that way."

She said the best thing about being an old lesbian is "being different".

"Not being the run off the mill," she said. "[Some other old women] have an old mentality, and I can’t relate to them. So what’s good about it is that I still feel fairly young and I’m young in my ways and ideas."

Barrett, who interviewed hundreds of LGBTI seniors in her time as a researcher at La Trobe University, said stories are integral to uncovering the structural discrimination faced by LGBTI elders.

"You can say to people lesbophobia is a problem, and you engage with their heads," she said. "But when you tell a story, you engage with people’s hearts.

"We thought what would be really powerful – imagine younger, or middle-aged or mature-aged lesbians going out and sitting down with an elder and asking, ‘What was it like for you?’"

On four days each week Malloy heads across the road to the nursing home part of the aged care facility, to keep company with older people who are less mobile and independent than she is.

Her partner of 20 years died two years ago - "I'm still getting over all of that" - and she has recently decided that she wants to get involved in the LGBTI community again.

Malloy attends a weekly meet-up in a local pub for older lesbians, though she's yet to find another lesbian as old as she is kicking around Adelaide: "I still appear to be the oldest one around."

She's also considering volunteering with various LGBTI charities – including one that visits older people who are housebound.

"Doors are opening now, once again," she said. "It’s a good journey."

Trump's Medical Costs Argument For Trans Military Ban "Completely Hysterical", Says Cate McGregor

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Lukas Coch / AAPIMAGE

Prominent Australian writer and broadcaster Catherine McGregor, who was previously the most senior transgender military officer in the country, has hit out at president Donald Trump's decree that transgender people can no longer serve in the US military.

In a series of tweets on Wednesday, Trump said the military "cannot be burdened" by the "tremendous medical costs and disruption" of transgender people serving.

There is great uncertainty about the immediate ramifications of the tweets, and the White House has indicated it currently has no plan for what to do about the thousands of transgender people already serving in the US military.

McGregor, who is now a civilian, told BuzzFeed News she was not surprised by the announcement.

"Coming from someone who has never served, and who disparaged [John] McCain’s heroism, you can see it for what it is," she said.

"Why should we be surprised? This is a guy who vilified a Gold Star family and didn’t have the decency to apologise, a man who has never spent a day in uniform."

McGregor joined the military in 1974 and served in several roles, including being deployed to Timor Leste on three occasions, and working as the speech writer to various Chiefs of Army. She retired in 2016.

She transitioned gender in 2012, and her story was documented in an episode of the ABC's Australian Story in 2014.

“The medical cost argument is completely hysterical, frankly," McGregor said.

"There are not a large number of transgender people in the military, and as a portion of the enormous United States military budget, medical support for transgender people would be a drop in the ocean.

"It’s a condition of service that you get medical support for any condition."

She also rejected the notion that transgender people weaken or disrupt the military.

"The argument should come down purely to military capability. He’s invoking that as the rationale – there’s no compelling military capability argument against trans service.

"In a democratic society, there is an important principle here that any suitably qualified citizen be allowed to serve in the military."

Top Military Leaders Say There's No Current Changes For Transgender Service Members

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Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

Leaders of several branches of the military say that transgender service members will continue to serve and receive health care until further notice, according to memos sent out by leadership on Wednesday and Thursday.

The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Joseph Dunford, said in a letter Thursday that there will be no changes for transgender personnel until the President sends further guidance, adding, "we will continue to treat all of our personnel with respect."

Letters from Army and Navy leaders echoed that message that all service members should "be treated with dignity and respect."

"There will be no modifications to the current policy until the President's direction has been received by the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary has issued implementation guidance," Dunford's letter, obtained by BuzzFeed News, says.

The Department of Defense referred BuzzFeed News to the White House for further comment. The White House did not immediately respond to questions about the letters. On Wednesday, the press secretary referred questions to the Department of Defense.

In a letter to all Air Force personnel on Thursday morning, Air Force Chief of Staff David L. Goldfein quoted the Joint Chiefs of Staff email and reiterated that no changes would take effect until further guidance comes down from the President.

"Secretary Wilson and I would like to emphasize that all Airmen will be treated with dignity and respect as we work through the potential policy changes referenced by the Chairman in his message below to military members."

The head of personnel for the US Navy also wrote in a letter to naval leaders that transgender service members in the Navy will continue to serve "until further guidance from the President is received."

"OSD (and by extension Navy) will not take any personnel actions or change any policy until further guidance from the President is received," wrote Navy Chief of Personnel Robert Burke on Wednesday evening in an email obtained by BuzzFeed News.

The letters come after the President announced on Twitter yesterday that transgender people will be banned from serving in the military entirely. Military leaders are working to decipher how and when that ban, which was criticized by both Republicans and Democrats yesterday, will be implemented.

Health care for transgender service members will also not be impacted for the moment, according to Burke's letter.

"If a member is receiving medical care, that does not cease. Currently-serving TG Service members will continue to receive all necessary medical care," the letter says.

"Treating service members with dignity and respect is something we expect from our Sailors at all times," Burke continues, adding that the Office of the Secretary of Defense is "working to quickly discern the President's intent."

Here's the full text of Dunford's letter on behalf of the Joint Chiefs of Staff:

From: CJCS
To: Service Chiefs, Commanders, and Senior Enlisted Leaders

I know there are questions about yesterday's announcement on the transgender policy by the President. There will be no modifications to the current policy until the President's direction has been received by the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary has issued implementation guidance.

In the meantime, we will continue to treat all of our personnel with respect. As importantly, given the current fight and the challenges we face, we will all remain focused on accomplishing our assigned missions.

The full text of Goldfein's letter to Air Force personnel:

To All Airmen,

Secretary Wilson and I would like to emphasize that all Airmen will be treated with dignity and respect as we work through the potential policy changes referenced by the Chairman in his message below to military members.

[quotes Joint Chiefs of Staff message]

David L. Golfein, Gen, USAF
21st Chief of Staff

And the text of the letter from Burke to Navy leaders:

From: Burke, Robert P VADM CNP, N1

Sent: Wednesday, July 26, 2017 6:48:42 PM (UTC-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)

Subject: Transgender Military Service Policy Change Announcements - Talking Points

Admirals,

I recognize that today's announcements regarding changes to the transgender (TG) military service policy are causing concern for some of our Sailors and that they likely have questions. While I won't be able to answer many of them, I wanted to provide you the latest information we have, to help you and your commanders best advise those Sailors.

The official OSD statement follows: "We refer all questions about the President's statements to the White House. We will continue to work closely with the White House to address the new guidance provided by the Commander-in-Chief on transgender individuals serving the military. We will provide revised guidance to the Department in the near future."

Based upon discussions with OSD staff today, who are working with the White House staff on specific guidance, the following direction was provided to the Services:

- OSD (and by extension Navy) will not take any personnel actions or change any policy until further guidance from the President is received.
- If a member is receiving medical care, that does not cease. Currently-serving TG Service members will continue to receive all necessary medical care.
- With regard to implications for those currently serving, OSD is working to quickly discern the President's intent.
- Treating service members with dignity and respect is something we expect from our Sailors at all times.

We recommend that you refer any transgender policy or individual Sailor case questions to our Navy Service Central Coordination Cell (SCCC). We still have the SCCC in operation and they are fielding queries. The SCCC can be reached via e-mail on the NPC LGBT Resources web page or via Navy 311 (see below for full contact details).

We are not planning to launch a NAVADMIN, or revise any other policy direction, until formal OSD guidance is promulgated.


Nancy Youssef contributed to this report.

LINK: Trump Says Transgender People Cannot "Serve In Any Capacity" In The Military

Which LGBT Character On Television Do You Admire?

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And are there any characters that helped you when you needed it most?

Television needs more LGBT characters – but there are some already out there that are worth celebrating.

Television needs more LGBT characters – but there are some already out there that are worth celebrating.

And I don't know about you, but having a well-written LGBT character meant a lot for me growing up watching television - it still does now.

BBC / Doctor Who

For example, I love Isak and Even's relationship in the Norweigan teen drama Skam, because it just showed us a relationship between two guys who love each other.

For example, I love Isak and Even's relationship in the Norweigan teen drama Skam, because it just showed us a relationship between two guys who love each other.

I needed such a relationship on screen when I was younger, but I'm so pleased that there is one now. Seeing such storylines on TV now make me hopeful that there are such relationships between LGBT youth.

NRK

Who are your favourite characters? I have been absolutely obsessed with Denise (Lena Waithe) in Master of None, who is a constant source of wisdom.

Who are your favourite characters? I have been absolutely obsessed with Denise (Lena Waithe) in Master of None, who is a constant source of wisdom.

And if you haven't seen the "Thanksgiving" episode of Master of None, you really should.

Netflix

And then there's the wonderful Buck Vu (Ian Alexander) in the deeply weird The OA, a character who I really want to see more of in the show's second season.

And then there's the wonderful Buck Vu (Ian Alexander) in the deeply weird The OA, a character who I really want to see more of in the show's second season.

COUGH MAKE THIS HAPPEN NETFLIX COUGH.

Other characters I love: Sophia (Laverne Cox) from Orange is the New Black and Josh (Josh Thomas) in Please Like Me.

Plan B Entertainment / Netflix


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