www.saliendodelcloset.org

Saliendo del Clóset, el primer programa radial gay de Puerto Rico a través de onda comercial desde enero del año 2000, te presenta su Blog para toda la comunidad Gay, Lésbica, Bisexual, Transexual y Transgénero de habla hispana. ¡Desde Puerto Rico para el Mundo!

sábado, julio 10, 2010

¿VACUNA CONTRA EL SIDA? NO HACE TANTO UN VIAJE FANTÁSTICO DE LA CIENCIA

NUEVO DESCUBRIMIENTO

ADVOCATE.COM/July7,2010/Jeffrey Gerson

A discovery of three antibodies that neutralize 91% of HIV strains has the potential to possibly lead to a future vaccine, according to an article published inSciencemagazine.

The antibodies were culled from the body of a 60 year old gay African-American male, referred to as Donor 45, who has been HIV positive for the last 20 years. According to the Wall Street Journal, the research team designed a specially crafted probe to exactly emulate the molecular site where the HIV-neutralizing antibodies attack.

Dr. Gary Nabel, director of the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, led the research team, stressed that the implementation of the antibodies must work towards a universal effect that can overcome the virus's constant mutations.

Theorized methods of implementation for the antibody vaccine include a raw form drug, a "microbicide" gel to be applied before sexual intercourse, and a stimulant that would cause the immune system to produce the antibodies before infection. The discovery also holds the possibility for boosting the effectiveness of already-existing HIV treatment medication.

Experimentation is in progress, but as Dr. Nabel asserts, "We're going to be at this for a while."

OBRA TEATRAL : EL PROYECTO LARAMIE


TEATRO CORIBANTE
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viernes, julio 09, 2010

DICTA CORTE FEDERAL : GLAD Vs. DOMA


GLAD: DEFIENDE EL MATRIMONIO DEL MISMO SEXO
DOMA: DEFENSE OF MARRIAGE ACT

365 Gay:News /Keen News Service/7-08-2010/Lisa Keen

In an enormous victory for same-sex marriage, a federal judge in Boston Thursday ruled, in two separate cases, that a critical part of the federal Defense of Marriage Act is unconstitutional.

Read this story for a breakdown of the two DOMA decisions, their scope and impact.

In one challenge brought by the state of Massachusetts, Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. Health and Human Services, Judge Joseph Tauro ruled that Congress violated the Tenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution when it passed DOMA and took from the states decisions concerning which couples can be considered married.

Tauro considered whether the federal law’s definition of marriage—one man and one woman—violates state sovereignty by treating some couples with Massachusetts’ marriage licenses differently than others.

In the other, Gill v. Office of Personnel Management, he ruled DOMA violates the equal protection principles embodied in the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.

One of the couples in the GLAD DOMA case

Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders, a gay legal group, had asked Tauro to consider whether DOMA violates the right of eight same-sex couples to equal protection of the law.

Both cases were argued separately in May. The decision released today is a relatively quick turnaround, given that some judges take almost a year to decide cases.

GLAD attorney Mary Bonauto told Tauro that DOMA constitutes a “classic equal protection” violation, by taking one class of married people in Massachusetts and dividing it into two. One class gets federal benefits, the other does not. Just as the federal government cannot take the word “person” and say it means only Caucasians or only women, said Bonauto, it should not be able to take the word “marriage” and say it means only heterosexual couples.

Bonauto said the government has no reason to withhold the more than 1,000 federal benefits of marriage from same-sex couples, and noted that a House Judiciary Committee report “explicitly stated the purpose of DOMA was to express moral disapproval of homosexuality.”

Maura T. Healey, chief of the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Civil Rights Division, told Judge Tauro that Section 3 of DOMA—the section that limits the definition of marriage for federal benefits to straight couples—violates the state’s right under the federal constitution to sovereign authority to define and regulate the marital status of its residents.

Healey called DOMA an “animus-based national marriage law” that intrudes on core state authority and “forces the state to discriminate against its own citizens.”

Christopher Hall, representing HHS, said Congress should be able to control the meaning of terms such as “marriage,” used in its own statutes, and should be able to control how federal money is allocated for federal benefits provided to persons based on their marital status.

Tauro essentially replied that the government’s power is not unlimited.

Both Bonauto at GLAD and Healey at the Attorney General’s office urged Tauro to apply heightened scrutiny in considering whether the federal government had any legitimate need for DOMA.

Heightened scrutiny requires the government to come up with a fairly significant reason for treating gay couples differently under the law. In both cases, however, the judge said that DOMA failed to meet even the most simple judicial review, rational basis –in other words, there was no justifiable reason to the federal government to treat same-sex couples differently.

Both lawsuits are very precise legal attacks against DOMA—targeting just Section 3—and most legal observers believe both cases will eventually be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court for resolution.

The only other marriage case right now that has that same potential is the Proposition 8 marriage case in a federal district court in San Francisco. Judge Vaughn Walker heard closing arguments in that case in June and has not yet issued his decision.

The next step for all three cases is the U.S. Court of Appeals.

DADT: LA ENCUESTA DEL PENTAGONO A LOS MILITARES


Y luego de darle dos o tres mil vueltas a este asunto de la política Don't ask, don't tell (DADT) de la milicia en los Estados Unidos, realmente no veo diferencias con el conflicto de los Niñitos Escuchas (Boy Scouts of America), con las mismas niñerías y pánico absurdo...con el solo propósito de usarlo como arma para discríminar AUN MÁS contra un colectivo que sirve de igual manera a su país...
Tengo fe en que Obama le pasará por encima a la encuestita esta, tal y como DADT oprime a sus militares homosexuales...
Les invito a que lean la interesante encuesta.

EL PROYECTO LARAMIE


EL PROYECTO LARAMIE
TEATRO CORIBANTE
8-9-10-11 DE JULIO DE 2010
INFORMACIÓN:
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PRODUCTOR: GARY HOMS
AUTOR: MOISES KAUFMAN
AND MEMBERS OF THE TECTONIC THEATRE PROJECT

jueves, julio 08, 2010

5TO FESTIVAL DE TEATRO DEL TERCER AMOR Y RE-EVOLUCIÓN INC.

T E A T R O C O R I B A N T E 8-9-10-11 DE JULIO DE 2010
INFORMACION: (787) 754-1991 / 767-7400 / 649-8013
DIRIGE: EMINEH DE LOURDES
PRODUCTOR: GARY HOMS
AUTOR: MOISES KAUFAM
AND MEMBERS OF THE TECTONIC THEATRE PROJECT

miércoles, julio 07, 2010

OTRO ASESINATO EN LA COMUNIDAD GAY EN LA ISLA: ¿SERÁ LA TÍPICA INVESTIGACIÓN?


Este es el tercer asesinato de un homosexual en lo que va del año

El Nuevo Día/7 de julio,2010/Frances Rosario

El tercer asesinato de un transexual en lo que va del año se registró en horas de la madrugada de hoy en el sector Terraplén de Loíza, informó el oficial de prensa de la región policiaca de Carolina, Adid Delgado.

Se trata de un hombre, que no ha sido identificado, pero que vestía ropa interior femenina, una peluca de cabello largo negro, una camisa ajustada azul y unas sandalias grises. No tenía pantalones, detalló el agente.

Se detalló que el hombre, que presentaba múltiples impactos de bala, era de tez blanca, de unos 25 años, aproximadamente 170 libras de peso y 5’ 11” de estatura. Tenía tatuajes en el hombro derecho y la pantorrilla derecha.

El transexual se encontró a pie de un auto compacto, tendido sobre arena de playa.

El agente Ángel Martínez de la División Homicidios de Carolina, el fiscal Luís Ríos Díaz y personal del Instituto de Ciencias Forenses se hicieron cargo de la investigación de la escena, donde ocuparon 12 casquillos de bala calibre 9 milímetros y un proyectil.

En los pasados meses, la transexual cagüeña Ángel “Angie” González Oquendo y la corozaleña “Ashley”, cuyo nombre de pila era Juan Antonio Santiago Ocasio, fueron ultimados.

¡ TREMENDO GOLPE EN HAWAII !


Confirmado: la gobernadora es una salmona de grandes ligas: contra la corriente...interesante artículo.

Advocate.com Editors/July 6,2010

Hawaii governor Linda Lingle has vetoed legislation that would have legalized civil unions in her state, while gay rights groups seem to be readying a lawsuit over her decision.

"After months of listening to Hawaii’s citizens express to me in writing and in person their deeply held beliefs in supporting or opposing House Bill 444, I've decided to veto" the bill, Lingle said Tuesday at a press conference in Honolulu.

The Republican governor clearly wasn't swayed by 7,500 letters, postcards, and petition signatures in favor of the legislation that were delivered to her by gay rights groups. Lingle was also presented with the results of a 2009 poll showing public support for civil unions.

The state house passed the legislation in April, after the senate approved it in January. Lingle, an opponent of marriage equality, has stated she believes civil unions will lead to same-sex marriage.

Evan Wolfson, the executive director of the group Freedom to Marry, was one of the attorneys in the historic case in which Hawaii's supreme court ruled, in 1993, that denying gay couples the right to marry was unconstitutional (after years of back-and-forth in the courts, the state would eventually amend its constitution to allow legislators to ban same-sex marriage). In a statement Wolfson said, “In the 1990s, Hawaii began the ongoing international movement toward ending gay couples' exclusion from marriage and was the first U.S. state to create a legal status to provide some state-level recognition and protections for same-sex couples.

“In the historic Baehr case, the Hawaii supreme court acknowledged a constitutional mandate to treat same-sex couples equally. Governor Lingle's decision to veto the civil union bill is deeply disappointing and unnecessarily delays Hawaii's journey toward fairness and equality. Governor Lingle has rejected the will of the state legislature and the advice of countless business and faith leaders, and turned her back on the committed couples and Hawaii kin who have expressed their support for this measure. Freedom to Marry urges the Hawaii state legislature to overrule Governor Lingle's veto and take an important step toward fairness and equal protection for same-sex couples in Hawaii.”

Lambda Legal's Jennifer Pizer indicated Lingle's decision does not serve Hawaii's business or family interests. “In caving in to a well-orchestrated disinformation campaign mounted by the bill’s opponents, Governor Lingle has abandoned thousands of Hawaii families who have needed this bill’s protections for many years,” Pizer said in a statement. “We’re also disappointed that the legislature opted to not override this veto immediately — we would have preferred to see couples win fair treatment through the political branch rather than having to pursue legal action. However, we’re still ready to do what’s necessary so our clients can protect their loved ones.”

The American Civil Liberties Union also hinted that a lawsuit is being prepared.

“We’re obviously disappointed that Governor Lingle has, once again, used her power to deny the people of Hawaii their civil rights,” Laurie Temple, staff attorney for the ACLU, said in a statement. “Luckily for the people of Hawaii, however, our constitution prevents discrimination based on sexual orientation. If the Governor won’t honor her oath to uphold the constitution, the courts will.”

Read Lingle's statement regarding her veto of House Bill 444 on the following page.

--

States Allowing Same-sex Marriage

Connecticut

Iowa

Massachusetts

New Hampshire

Vermont

Same-sex marriage also legal in Washington, D.C.

States With Civil Unions/Domestic Partnerships

California

Maine

Nevada

New Jersey

New York

Oregon

Washington

Wisconsin

States With Some Domestic-Partner Rights

Colorado — Colorado allows unmarried adults to enter into a Designated Beneficiary Agreement, which provides certain rights including hospital visitation, medical decision-making, and inheritance.

Hawaii — Same-sex couples can enter into a reciprocal beneficiary relationship. Benefits include inheritance without a will, ability to sue for wrongful death, loan eligibility, property rights, and protection under Hawaii domestic violence laws.

Maryland — Same-sex couples are entitled to 11 protections available to married couples. In February, Maryland attorney general Doug Gansler issued a advisory legal opinion concluding that the state can recognize same-sex marriages performed outside Maryland. In a follow-up, Gansler said state agencies should take steps to recognize those rights. His recommendation has not been implemented and is expected to be challenged.

After months of listening to Hawaii’s citizens express to me in writing and in person their deeply held beliefs and heartfelt reasons for supporting or opposing the Civil Unions Bill, I have made the decision to veto HB 444.

I have been open and consistent in my opposition to same gender marriage and find that HB 444 is essentially marriage by another name.

However, I want to be clear that my personal opinion is not the basis for my decision against allowing this legislation to become law. Neither is my veto based on my religious beliefs or on the political impact it might have on me or anyone else of either political party in some future election.

I am vetoing this bill because I have become convinced that this issue is of such significant societal importance that it deserves to be decided directly by all the people of Hawaii.

The subject of this legislation has touched the hearts and minds of our citizens as no other social issue of our day. It would be a mistake to allow a decision of this magnitude to be made by one individual or a small group of elected officials.

And while ours is a system of representative government it also is one that recognizes that, from time to time, there are issues that require the reflection, collective wisdom and consent of the people and reserves to them the right to directly decide those matters. This is one such issue.

The legislative maneuvering that brought HB 444 to an 11th hour vote, on the final day of the session, via a suspension of the rules, after legislators lead the public to believe that the bill was dead, was wrong and unfair to the public they represent. After eight years of observing members of the Majority Party manipulate the legislative process when it suits them, I initially accepted their actions as business as usual. That was wrong too.

There has not been a bill I have contemplated more or an issue I have thought more deeply about during my nearly eight years as governor than HB 444 and the institution of marriage.

After listening to those both for and against HB 444 I have gained a new appreciation for just how deeply people of all ages and backgrounds feel on this matter, and how significantly they believe the issue will affect their lives.

Few could be unmoved by the poignant story told to me in my office by a young, Big Island man who recounted the journey he had taken to bring himself to tell his very traditional parents that he was gay. I was similarly touched by the mother who in the same office expressed anguish at the prospect of the public schools teaching her children that a same gender marriage was equivalent to their mother and father’s marriage.

In addition to meeting in person with citizens of differing opinions, I have read legal memos on both sides of the issue, some urging me to veto the bill because of unintended consequences and guaranteed years of court battles while others urged support for what they consider a legally sound bill that grants long overdue civil rights.

But in the end, it wasn’t the persuasiveness of public debates, the soundness of legal arguments, or the volume of letters and emails that convinced me to reach this decision. It was the depth of emotion felt by those on both sides of the issue that revealed to me how fundamental the institution of marriage is to our community. It is as fundamental to those who support marriage between two people of the same gender as it is to those who support marriage only between one man and one woman.

This is a decision that should not be made by one person sitting in her office or by members of the Majority Party behind closed doors in a legislative caucus, but by all the people of Hawaii behind the curtain of the voting booth.

As difficult as the past few weeks have been, I am comfortable with my decision while knowing full well that many will be disappointed by it.

And while some will disagree with my decision to veto this bill, I hope most will agree that the flawed process legislators used does not reflect the dignity this issue deserves, and that a vote by all the people of Hawaii is the best and fairest way to address an issue that elicits such deeply felt emotion by those both for and against.

I have done my very best to reach a reasoned decision in a manner that brings honor to the political process and that I hope a majority of people believe reflects the values of Hawaii.

martes, julio 06, 2010

¡ TRATAMIENTO MÉDICO CONTRA EL LESBIANISMO !


Only in America!

The Stranger.com/JUNE 30,2010/Dan Savage

That's not fair, as Hanna Rosin at Slate will shortly point out. Pediatric endocrinologist Maria New—of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Florida International University—isn't just trying to prevent lesbianism by treating pregnant women with an experimental hormone. She's also trying to prevent the births of girls who display an "abnormal" disinterest in babies, don't want to play with girls' toys or become mothers, and whose "career preferences" are deemed too "masculine." Unbelievable:

The majority of researchers and clinicians interested in the use of prenatal “dex” focus on preventing development of ambiguous genitalia in girls with CAH. CAH results in an excess of androgens prenatally, and this can lead to a “masculinizing” of a female fetus’s genitals. One group of researchers, however, seems to be suggesting that prenatal dex also might prevent affected girls from turning out to be homosexual or bisexual.

Pediatric endocrinologist Maria New, of Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Florida International University, and her long-time collaborator, psychologist Heino F. L. Meyer-Bahlburg, of Columbia University, have been tracing evidence for the influence of prenatal androgens in sexual orientation.... They specifically point to reasons to believe that it is prenatal androgens that have an impact on the development of sexual orientation. The authors write, "Most women were heterosexual, but the rates of bisexual and homosexual orientation were increased above controls . . . and correlated with the degree of prenatal androgenization.” They go on to suggest that the work might offer some insight into the influence of prenatal hormones on the development of sexual orientation in general. “That this may apply also to sexual orientation in at least a subgroup of women is suggested by the fact that earlier research has repeatedly shown that about one-third of homosexual women have (modestly) increased levels of androgens.” They “conclude that the findings support a sexual-differentiation perspective involving prenatal androgens on the development of sexual orientation.”

And it isn’t just that many women with CAH have a lower interest, compared to other women, in having sex with men. In another paper entitled “What Causes Low Rates of Child-Bearing in Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia?” Meyer-Bahlburg writes that “CAH women as a group have a lower interest than controls in getting married and performing the traditional child-care/housewife role. As children, they show an unusually low interest in engaging in maternal play with baby dolls, and their interest in caring for infants, the frequency of daydreams or fantasies of pregnancy and motherhood, or the expressed wish of experiencing pregnancy and having children of their own appear to be relatively low in all age groups.”

In the same article, Meyer-Bahlburg suggests that treatments with prenatal dexamethasone might cause these girls’ behavior to be closer to the expectation of heterosexual norms: “Long term follow-up studies of the behavioral outcome will show whether dexamethasone treatment also prevents the effects of prenatal androgens on brain and behavior.”

In a paper published just this year in the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, New and her colleague, pediatric endocrinologist Saroj Nimkarn of Weill Cornell Medical College, go further, constructing low interest in babies and men—and even interest in what they consider to be men’s occupations and games—as “abnormal,” and potentially preventable with prenatal dex:

“Gender-related behaviors, namely childhood play, peer association, career and leisure time preferences in adolescence and adulthood, maternalism, aggression, and sexual orientation become masculinized in 46,XX girls and women with 21OHD deficiency [CAH]. These abnormalities have been attributed to the effects of excessive prenatal androgen levels on the sexual differentiation of the brain and later on behavior.” Nimkarn and New continue: “We anticipate that prenatal dexamethasone therapy will reduce the well-documented behavioral masculinization...”

It seems more than a little ironic to have New, one of the first women pediatric endocrinologists and a member of the National Academy of Sciences, constructing women who go into “men’s” fields as “abnormal.” And yet it appears that New is suggesting that the “prevention” of “behavioral masculinization” is a benefit of treatment to parents with whom she speaks about prenatal dex. In a 2001 presentation to the CARES Foundation (a videotape of which we have), New seemed to suggest to parents that one of the goals of treatment of girls with CAH is to turn them into wives and mothers. Showing a slide of the ambiguous genitals of a girl with CAH, New told the assembled parents:

“The challenge here is... to see what could be done to restore this baby to the normal female appearance which would be compatible with her parents presenting her as a girl, with her eventually becoming somebody’s wife, and having normal sexual development, and becoming a mother. And she has all the machinery for motherhood, and therefore nothing should stop that, if we can repair her surgically and help her psychologically to continue to grow and develop as a girl.”

In the Q&A period, during a discussion of prenatal dex treatments, an audience member asked New, “Isn’t there a benefit to the female babies in terms of reducing the androgen effects on the brain?” New answered, “You know, when the babies who have been treated with dex prenatally get to an age in which they are sexually active, I’ll be able to answer that question.” At that point, she’ll know if they are interested in taking men and making babies.

In a previous Bioethics Forum post, Alice Dreger noted an instance of a prospective father using knowledge of the fraternal birth order effect to try to avoid having a gay son by a surrogate pregnancy. There may be other individualized instances of parents trying to ensure heterosexual children before birth. But the use of prenatal dexamethasone treatments for CAH represents, to our knowledge, the first systematic medical effort attached to a “paradigm” of attempting in utero to reduce rates of homosexuality, bisexuality, and “low maternal interest.”

So no more Elena Kagans, no more Donna Shalalas, no more Martina Navratilovas, no more k.d. langs, no more Constance McMillens—because all women must grow up to suck dick, crank out babies, and do women's work. And the existence of adult women who are not interested in "becoming someone's wife" and "making babies" constitutes a medical emergency that requires us to treat women who are currently pregnant with a dangerous experimental hormone. Otherwise their daughters might grow up to, um, be nominated to sit on the Supreme Court, serve as cabinet secretaries, take 18 Grand Slam singles titles, win Grammies, and take their girlfriends to prom.

And we can't have that.

Two things: Gay people have been stressing out about the day arriving when scientists developed treatments to prevent homosexuality. The preventing gay sheep freak out is here, Twilight of the Golds is here, and I recall—but can't quickly find a link for—a "fellow" at the Family Research Council or the American Family Association who backed in-utero hormone treatments to prevent homosexuality. Well, here we are—the day appears to have arrived. Now what are we going to do about it?

And will the Republicans on the Judiciary Committee invite Maria New to testify at Elana Kagan's confirmation hearings?

New could argue that Kagan—childless, unmarried Kagan—is unfit to serve on our highest court because her "low maternal interest" pegs her as abnormal, well outside the "maternal mainstream." Maybe GOP senators would be mollified if Kagan knocked back a few bottles of dex during her confirmation hearings?

UPDATE: A little more about dex from Alice Dreger:

The specific drug we're talking about, dexamethasone, is not a benign drug for pregnant women, nor for the children exposed in utero. The studies we do have on the early prenatal use of "dex" are worrisome. The number of women and children missing from the follow-up studies of this drug use is more worrisome still.

This drug is unequivocally experimental and risky. That's why, back in February, I organized interested members of the Bioethics community to fight to make sure every woman offered dex for CAH knows the truth about its experimental and risky nature. (You can read about our efforts in Time magazine. And you can about the medical establishment's resultant mad scampering to make sure everyone knows this is experimental here.) Make no mistake: In spite of Dr. Maria New's outrageous FDA-regulation-flaunting claims that this off-label drug use "has been found safe for mother and child," it ain't been. New is a rogue pediatrician whom medical societies have been nudging (and sometimes yelling at) for years. Because she apparently wouldn't stop experimenting on these women and children without ethics oversight, in January I got called in to help by a few freaked-out clinicians. And I called in my colleagues to call out the feds. New just looks and sounds safe for mothers and children. Which is why she's really dangerous.

domingo, julio 04, 2010

A TIEMPOS REVUELTOS...

LA ÚNICA SOLUCIÓN ES LA LUZ DE LOS SABIOS: DEL TIEMPO...

Sabio es el que escucha, no el que a gritos dispara razones...ese está muerto del miedo y sorprendentemente MUY sonámbulo en su proceso de vida.
En momentos de gran conflicto en este paisíto bendecido por los vientos y demás dioses... previendo los malos tiempos que inevitablemente se avecinan; es preciso reflexionar antes de actuar impulsivamente, es preciso darle un segundo al pensamiento y mantener el norte hacia la justicia y sobre todo lo demás la PAZ, sin el miedo que tanto nubla el entendimiento y el presente.
Es el miedo nuestro peor enemigo, el mejor, la fe en todas sus facetas. Si pensamos en la raíz de todo mal del ser humano llegamos al sentimiento del miedo, no hay más que buscar.
Si recordamos esto, el camino será más fácil, más llevadero y adelantaremos el paso por milenios...tendremos gana parte de esa tremenda lucha interna.
Es demasiado importante, hoy, el meditar unos minutos en las sabias palabras de un maestro del mundo, sin apasionarse y sin pensar en religiones, las palabras sabias tienen cualquier orígen y llegan en el momento preciso...

"Peace does not mean no more conflict among humanity. Conflict is bound to happen, so in order to keep peace in spite of conflict, the only realistic method is the spirit of dialogue, respecting the other side and understanding their viewpoint. We need to try and solve problems in a spirit of brotherhood and sisterhood, in a spirit of reconciliation and compromise" Dalai Lama

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