U.S. court strikes down Florida transgender health rule

https://www.reuters.com/legal/us-court-strikes-down-florida-transgender-health-rule-2023-06-22/

 
A person holds up a flag during rally to protest the Trump administration's reported transgender proposal to narrow the definition of gender to male or female at birth in New York
A person holds up a flag during rally to protest the Trump administration’s reported transgender proposal to narrow the definition of gender to male or female at birth, at City Hall in New York City, U.S., October 24, 2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File photo

June 21 (Reuters) – A U.S. judge on Wednesday struck down a Florida rule and a statute that banned state Medicaid payments for transgender healthcare, marking the second defeat in two weeks for anti-transgender legislation in the state.

U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle declared the state’s practices invalid, saying they violated the constitutional right to equal protection under the 14th amendment in addition to violating the federal Medicaid statue and the Affordable Care Act’s prohibition of sex discrimination.

The injunction was expected after Hinkle on June 6 partially blocked Florida from enforcing its recent ban on people under 18 receiving gender-affirming care such as puberty blockers and hormone therapy.

U.S. district court judges elsewhere have blocked state laws banning gender-affirming care in Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana and Oklahoma.

Republican lawmakers introduced more than 500 bills restricting LGBTQ rights this past legislative year, passing more than 70, according to Human Rights Campaign. Twenty states have passed laws banning gender-affirming care for minors.

Sponsors of the laws say they want to protect children who are being misled by parents and doctors and might regret their gender transition.

Hinkle in his 54-page ruling said “many people with this view tend to disapprove all things transgender and so oppose medical care that supports a person’s transgender existence.”

“The elephant in the room should be noted at the outset. Gender identity is real. The record makes this clear,” the judge wrote after a two-week trial.

The plaintiffs were two transgender adults, August Dekker and Brit Rothstein, and two transgender minors who filed under pseudonyms.

The defendants were the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) and its secretary, Jason Weida, who did not respond to an after-hours request for comment.

The AHCA had approved Medicaid payments for the plaintiffs, but in 2022 the executive office of Governor Ron DeSantis ordered the AHCA to conduct a new analysis and reversed course. The AHCA “retained only consultants known in advance for their staunch opposition to gender-affirming care,” the judge found.

“The new … process was, from the outset, a biased effort to justify a predetermined outcome, not a fair analysis of the evidence,” the judge said.

DeSantis is running for the Republican nomination for president and has promoted his record of aggressively fighting progressive policies, including LGBTQ rights.

SLATE: When I Transitioned in Rural Tennessee, I Never Could Have Expected the Reaction

When I Transitioned in Rural Tennessee, I Never Could Have Expected the Reaction
A sort of tenuous harmony was once possible for queer people in places like this. But the future looks grim.

Read in Slate: https://apple.news/Amf5UJ7itT0ukcixFm83ocw

Shared from Apple News

Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie

More of the craziness.

“There are tens of thousands of studies that show the horrendous danger of WiFi radiation.” – Robert Kennedy Jr., speaking on Joe Rogan’s podcast. Yesterday Kennedy claimed that chemicals in drinking water are turning children transgender.
This is what the right wing media does now, enrage their thuggish followers to find and attack anyone they disagree with. Brownshirt gang enforcers. We have seen this before in history. Hugs

heleninedinburgh34 minutes ago

I’d just like to point out that kids being trans is not, in fact, bad.

Colonel Fred Puntridge  kuiaratamenai a minute ago

“I never drink water. Fish fuck in it!” –attributed to WC Fields

band💋 boatboy_srq9 minutes ago

“First they came for the frogs, and I did not speak out— Because I was not a frog.”

TomKitten196036 minutes ago edited

Many trans people have brothers and sisters who are cis-gendered and remain so. They grow up in the same environment, drinking the same “toxic” water. It ain’t the water, honey. And it ain’t a “problem” that you can (or need to) solve by throwing your stupidity at it.

https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/misguided-republican-hearing-jan-6-rioters-matters-rcna90010

What’s weird is when members of the majority feel the need to hold their own fake hearing. Politico reported:

…Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), joined by a handful of others from the conference’s right flank, hosted an event last week with former Trump acting assistant attorney general Jeffrey Clark, people charged in relation to Jan. 6, defendants’ family members and allies. The event featured a veritable kitchen sink of conspiracy theories as well as rehashed false claims, including that the 2020 election was “stolen” and that the Jan. 6 committee “doctored” video.

Just so we’re clear, this was not an actual congressional hearing. The far-right Floridian, however, wanted it to be perceived as one. Gaetz pretended to be a chairman, recognizing members and witnesses, alerting participants to when their time had expired, and explaining that the “testimony” could be used in official proceedings. (That last part was true but irrelevant: Anything can be used in official proceedings, including the blog post you’re reading now.)

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Hunter M14 hours ago

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The employee told the court the priest urged workers to “get the sins out,” and asked employees if they had stolen from the employer, been late for work, had done anything to harm their employer, or if they had bad intentions toward their employer.
“Juneteenth becoming a federal holiday is a nationalized race hustle. Why do Blacks need their own national independence day? We used to have a red, white, and blue independence day on July 4th. Now, we have one based on the melanin content of your skin.
“These people will not be stopped unless you say no more. Appeasement does not work. It’s a middle finger to the promise of 1776, You are going to have to choose.” – Charlie Kirk, who days ago called Juneteenth “pagan garbage.”

Randy503 StarGmoma day ago

He’s getting more and more extreme. I predict within a year he will be calling for the outright enslavement of black people, and the extermination of all LBGTs and anyone living in poverty.

Octoberfurst Randy50321 hours ago

I totally agree! He is becoming more and more extreme by the day. I’ll bet he is just dying to say “the N word” out loud. Next thing you know he’ll be having a swastika flag in the background and explaining why the Nazis were “misunderstood” and were actually brave Christian patriots. Kirk truly is a miserable POS!

beb Octoberfurst11 hours ago

He’s in a rat race to be the most extreme commenter on the Internet. That’s why he has to become ever extreme. Of course win or lose, in a rat race you’re still a rat.

SkokieDaddy – wiener dog dada day ago

I certainly want a white man to tell me how racist Juneteenth is. /s

Harveyrabbit 🐱a day ago

“Now, we have one based on the melanin content of your skin.”

Riiiight.

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Jonathan  Joe in NMa day ago
Thom Hartmann wrote the other day that after Trump requested the lists of the employees (spies) and had repeated unrecorded conversations with Russian diplomats, Kisylak, and others, the CIA had to pull agents and there was a silence in our intelligence operations, it’s suspected Trump turned them all over to the Russians.
Many were killed, or disappeared.

Niblet58 Joe in NMa day ago

That and a whole lot of other info. He asked for a list of the US spies and I bet you he turned it right over to our enemies in Russia, North Korea, China, etc.

A Washington Post investigation found that more than a year would pass before prosecutors and FBI agents jointly embarked on a formal probe of actions directed from the White House to try to steal the election. Even then, the FBI stopped short of identifying the former president as a focus of that investigation. A wariness about appearing partisan, institutional caution, and clashes over how much evidence was sufficient to investigate the actions of Trump and those around him all contributed to the slow pace.
CaliJABa day ago
Republicans are attempting to do the same thing to our justice system that they did with the media. They cried media bias again and again until it got to the point they started received special treatment. It became unbalanced in favor of them. Now, if Republicans commit crimes the FBI won’t investigate them. That whole fake elector scheme … the FBI won’t do shit about it. If it was Democrats, they would have been charged on day one.

robirob CaliJABa day ago edited

But they received special treatment from the start! All the right wing does is claim victimhood and blame socialist liberal bullies for having to take drastic action based on made up lies like the election was stolen, Hunter Biden’s laptop, Critical Race Theory or Drag Queens, Gays, and Trans grooming children. And when they go against media outlets like Fox News or the FBI they just let the right wing mob call them names without repercussion. Now there’s right wing talk about defunding the FBI and Pentagon departments, and I assume they will just roll over and keep asking for a belly rub from the right wing and afterwards start an investigation into Hillary’s emails or Hunter Biden’s laptop.

crewman CaliJABa day ago

It’s why Comey tripped over himself in a Rush to “go public” with a nothingburger investigation into Hillary right before her election, an act which is widely viewed as costing her the election. And it’s probably why Mueller lacked umph to boldly go where he needed to go

The law is extremely broad, which actually creates a host of other complications. A group of lawyers previously told The Dallas Morning News that the measure could restrict performances by artists such as Madonna and Miley Cyrus, which often feature sexual dancing.
The text could even affect bachelorette parties, if they involved sex toys or other paraphernalia. The new changes could even impact cheerleading and criminalize sexual conduct between consenting 17-year-olds (17 is the age of consent in Texas).
Movie screenings and art history classes could similarly come under fire. And of course, the law will affect its original target: drag performers, Pride parades, and transgender people just trying to live their lives.
San Francisco is definitely facing problems, but you could surely find a similar scene in Miami.
Boreal2 hours ago
Clearly he’s never walked around in Florida.

unsavedheathen2 hours ago

I have lived in Dallas for 25 years(OMG, I’ve lived in Dallas for 25 years) and in that time, Texas has existed under complete Republican domination.

Also in that time, I have seen men defecate on the streets of Dallas and drugs being bought, sold and used on the streets of Dallas. I have seen tent encampments of hundreds of homeless. I have seen those encampments bulldozed. There are beggars on every median at every major intersection citywide.

I don’t know how they keep a straight face when they point at SF and sneer. At least there’s a beach.

TnCTampa2 hours ago

This bullshit about crime etc appeals to the voters, The people that actually go and vote in every election. It also appeals to the independents. The GOP is going to have them so afraid of out of control crime by “those people” that come the election they will run to vote for desantis. Democrats going to have to turn out in even greater numbers than the last election to defeat these people… thats what worries me the most

SKan hour ago

The price of living is out of whack. Rents are way too high. The people the GQP pander to are the same ones who cause the problem. A perfect example of why it’s like this; developers who are based in one city (or country) own blocks of land in other cities and countries. One block = one apt complex, which is of course “luxurious” and overpriced. This means people who actually live in the city don’t have the money or leverage to make their home town better. It’s very complicated. This is a broken down version of of a broken system.

Those amendments, along with a third to evaluate staffing levels within the Defense Department’s so-called diversity, equity and inclusion office, offer an early sign of some of the pending disputes as conservatives target what they call “woke” Pentagon policies.
Specifically, Rep. Mark Alford’s amendments, shared with CQ Roll Call ahead of their formal introduction, would bar DOD from using any fiscal 2024 dollars for its working group aiming to counter extremism or for the deputy inspector general post lawmakers previously created seeking to root out extremism in the military.
Thurgood Stubbs 3 days ago
You have to be a real dipshit to be in a union and vote Republican.

stretchdad Thurgood Stubbs3 days ago

I know of three highly-unionized professions that tilt heavily conservative: firefighters, police, and airline pilots. And I’ve heard them talk shit about unions in other industries even though they share the very same concerns: wages, staffing levels, working conditions, etc.

Perfect exemplars of the “I’ve got mine, fuck you” mentality.

“All we were doing was promoting literacy and providing kids with cute, good stories,” drag queen Juicy Garland said. In the videos, people are yelling, banging on the windows and doing Nazi salutes while holding a sign that says, “defend white communities,” all while a drag performer was inside reading books to families.
The group “seeks to form an underground network of white men who are willing to fight against their perceived enemies through localized direct actions,” according to the Anti-Defamation League’s website. “Off our streets!” NSC-131 members shouted repeatedly. Police at the scene said it was unclear whether or not they were armed. No arrests were made.
The men wearing hats with the number 131, said story hour was intended to “groom” young children, and continually shouted slurs at people walking in and out of the cafe. Teatotaller doesn’t get this reaction every time they host a Sunday story hour, but in November it was swarmed by the Proud Boys while the same guest, Juicy Garland, read stories.

‘Til Tuesday 🎧 Blue Bear DJ 🎸a day ago

The story says police were at the scene but I’m guessing they were reluctant to do anything against their fellow officers.

amandagirl15701 ‘Til Tuesday 🎧 Blue Bear DJ 🎸a day ago

Yep

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Well-funded Christian group behind US effort to roll back LGBTQ+ rights

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/jun/19/alliance-defending-freedom-lgbtq-rights-america

Advocacy groups condemn Alliance Defending Freedom as ‘a danger to every American who values their freedoms’

person holding a pride flag above people's heads

Glaad said: ‘The ADF is simply an anti-LGBTQ group trying to abuse levers of government to push discrimination and keep their warped sense of control.’ Photograph: Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

With the US besieged by a rightwing culture war campaign that aims to strip away rights from LGBTQ+ people and others, blame tends to be focused on Republican politicians and conservative media figures.

But lurking behind efforts to roll back abortion rights, to demonize trans people, and to peel back the protections afforded to gay and queer Americans is a shadowy, well-funded rightwing legal organization, experts say.

Since it was formed in 1994, Alliance Defending Freedom has been at the center of a nationwide effort to limit the rights of women and LGBTQ+ people, all in the name of Christianity. The Southern Poverty Law Center has termed it an “anti-LGBTQ hate group” that has extended its tentacles into nearly every area of the culture wars.

In the process, it has won the ear of some of the most influential people in the US, and become “a danger to every American who values their freedoms”, according to Glaad, the LGBTQ+ advocacy organization.

Members of the far-right Patriot Front at a rally in Washington in May.

Through “model legislation” and lawsuits filed across the country, ADF aims to overturn same-sex marriage, enact a total ban on abortion, and strip away the already minimal rights that trans people are afforded in the US.

Under the Trump administration, the group found its way into the highest echelons of power, advising Jeff Sessions, the then attorney general, before he announced sweeping guidance to protect “religious liberty” which chipped away at LGBTQ+ protections.

The organization counts among its sometime associates Amy Coney Barrett, the supreme court justice who the Washington Post reported spoke five times at an ADF training program established to push a “distinctly Christian worldview in every area of law”.

ADF is engaged in “a very strong campaign to put a certain type of religious view at the center of American life”, said Rabia Muqaddam, senior staff attorney at the Center for Reproductive Rights.

“[The ADF campaign] extends to abortion, it extends to LGBTQ folks, to immigration, to what kind of religion we think is America, what kind of people we think are American,” Muqaddam said.

“It’s as dramatic as that. I think we are in a fight to preserve democracy and preserve America as a place where we do tolerate and encourage and empower everyone.”

ADF was founded in 1994 by a group of “leaders in the Christian community”, according to its website. Among those leaders was James Dobson, the founder of the anti-LGBTQ+ Focus on the Family organization who has said the 2012 Sandy Hook mass shooting, in which 20 children and six adults were killed, was a “judgment” from God because of declining church numbers.

Its leaders remain involved in niche interpretations of Christianity. Kristen Waggoner, the ADF chief executive, also serves as legal counsel to Assemblies of God, a church which encourages worshippers to speak in tongues and believes in “divine healing” – the power of prayer – as a medical tool.

Over the past two decades, ADF has been a main driver in dozens of pieces of rightwing legislation and lawsuits.

The organization is currently behind the lawsuit 303 Creative, Inc v Elenis, which the supreme court is expected to decide this month, and which could chip away at LGBTQ+ rights. It’s a case that is classic ADF – a seemingly manufactured issue which the group has managed to chase all the way through the American legal system.

The plaintiff, 303 Creative, is a website design company. 303 Creative has never made wedding websites, but its owner, Lorie Smith, claims her first amendment rights are being impinged because, if she were to start making wedding websites, she would not want to make them for same-sex couples – which would violate Colorado’s anti-discrimination laws.

Another ADF obsession is abortion. It was involved, Muqaddam said, in crafting a 15-week abortion ban in Mississippi – which prompted a legal case that found its way to the supreme court – eventually resulting in Roe v Wade, which guaranteed the right to abortion, being overturned in 2022.

“Alliance Defending Freedom has been instrumental in the dismantling of Roe and the ongoing efforts to eliminate abortion nationwide,” Muqaddam said.

“They enacted a law that they knew was unconstitutional, they enacted it for the purpose of generating case after case after case to push it out to the supreme court until they found a court that was sympathetic to their argument,” Muqaddam said.

She added: “I think that’s exactly what is happening in the LGBTQ context as well. Their goal is to limit individual rights as much as possible.”

The ADF website shows the breadth of its involvement in rightwing culture wars. The organization touts its work opposing abortion, on opposing same-sex marriage and opposing trans rights.

“We advocate for laws and precedents that promote human flourishing by recognizing the important differences between men and women and honoring God’s design for marriage between one man and one woman,” ADF’s website reads.

But Emerson Hodges, a research analyst at the SPLC, said what ADF is really doing is attempting to “undo LGBTQ social and legislative progress”.

“They go under the guise of religious liberty, and religious freedom. What that means, though, is this religious liberty to discriminate and the religious freedom to invalidate LGBTQ individuals,” Hodges said.

Worryingly, there are signs that ADF, and other groups like it, are growing in influence. As Republican politicians and rightwing media fan the flames of an extremist culture war, NBC reported that donations to ADF, which is a registered non-profit, more than doubled from 2011 to 2021.

As it has grown in influence, ADF’s “model legislation” has found its way into state legislatures across the country, as the group attempts to strip away LGBTQ+ rights, and the rights of trans people in particular.

They’ve worked to ban the right to choose, and are in cahoots with other extremist groups to oppress marginalized people

Glaad

“Just about every anti-LGBT legislation that you’ve seen probably in the past decade was probably copied or paraphrased off of a model legislation built by Alliance Defending Freedom,” Hodges said.

“They provide legal advocacy support, litigation and policy models for government officials.”

An article on ADF’s website states that it is a “biblical truth” that “men and women are physically different”, and the organization has duly worked to prevent trans people taking part in women’s sports.

The group sued a school district in Minnesota in 2016, and in 2021 a judge in Connecticut dismissed an ADF lawsuit which sought to prevent transgender athletes competing in high school sports. The same year, ADF backed a lawsuit brought by a teacher in Virginia who had said he would not use a transgender child’s preferred pronouns because that would amount to “sinning against our God”.

In April, ADF, which did not respond to a Guardian request for comment, filed in Oregon on behalf of a Christian woman who wanted to foster children, but said she would not agree to “respect, accept, and support … the sexual orientation, gender identity, [and] gender expression” of a child placed with her, the Statesman Journal reported.

“[ADF’s] obsession with targeting LGBTQ people is unhinged and drastically out of touch with supermajorities of Americans who support LGBTQ people and laws to protect us from discrimination,” said Sarah Kate Ellis, the president and chief executive of Glaad.

“Everyone should understand the truth: the ADF is simply an anti-LGBTQ group trying to abuse levers of government to push discrimination and keep their warped sense of control.

“They’ve also worked to ban the right to choose, and are in cahoots with other extremist groups to oppress marginalized people. ADF is a danger to every American who values their freedoms – to be ourselves, live freely, and be welcome to contribute and to succeed in every area of society.”

Right-wing trolls couldn’t stop this Santa Cruz drag sleepover camp

https://www.sfgate.com/sf-culture/article/bay-area-drag-camp-18074207.php

Kiara, a 12-year-old from Santa Cruz, felt her nerves surge as she peered through the trees toward a large cabin, hearing the murmur of voices in the distance. 

Before arriving at the Young Actors’ Theatre Camp in Santa Cruz on the first weekend of April, she had spent all Friday daydreaming at school about what the drag workshop she had enrolled in would actually look and feel like. Would it unfold like an episode of “RuPaul’s Drag Race”? Would the other campers like her ideas? What if she just couldn’t keep up? 

“I didn’t have wigs or anything to bring. I had never done makeup before. And I was worried because I thought I’d be surrounded by people who’ve done drag for a while at the camp,” she said. 

Of the approximately 45 young people at the overnight camp, just seven had signed up for the drag curriculum. All seven (ranging in age from sixth to ninth grade) were first-time campers and had no drag training. “I started to ask around to others, and nobody had done it before,” Kiara said. “It just made me feel a lot more at ease.” 

Attending the camp was an evolution of Kiara’s own experimentation at home, including dressing up in feminine looks and leaning into fluid gender expression, says her father, Andrew. He felt a tinge of nerves about the camp.

House of DaBubbly, made up of the students in “The Art of Drag” Young Actors’ Theatre Camp workshop, perform in a showcase at the end of the weekend in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. 
House of DaBubbly, made up of the students in “The Art of Drag” Young Actors’ Theatre Camp workshop, perform in a showcase at the end of the weekend in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. Magali Gauthier/Special to SFGATE

“But as soon as I got there, met the camp leaders and saw Kiara’s excitement, I think I started to feel at ease that this was the right place,” Andrew said.

‘It is about us thriving’

Drag has a long place in the arc of American performing arts and played a crucial role in empowering gay men, but in recent years has come under fire from conservatives who have equated the art form (and any other sort of gender subversion) with “grooming” and “pedophilia,” resulting in intimidating protests against “drag story time” events at public libraries and noisy backlash at schools. Lawmakers in Tennessee went so far as restricting public drag performances, though a federal judge has temporarily blocked the law.

The YATC event was no different: An inflammatory article by the Daily Mail and a campaign by the notorious far-right influencer LibsofTikTok led the organization to receive hundreds of terrorizing messages, lasting for weeks after the camp ended. (As a result, many of the sources in this story asked to be identified by first names only, and were granted anonymity in accordance with Hearst’s ethics policy.) 

Nonetheless, the hate pales in comparison to the support the inaugural camp has received, says YATC co-founder Shawn Ryan, and the group plans to maintain its drag program in the future. It has become another piece of the history of drag in the Bay Area, in the same vein as Dolores Park’s Hunky Jesus, a “drag laureate” for San Francisco, and other influential local drag pioneers. No amount of bad-faith criticism can strip the importance of that, Ryan says: “It is not just about survival. It is about us thriving.” 

Young Actors’ Theatre Camp co-founding director Shawn Ryan welcomes guests to the showcase at the end of the weekend in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. 
Young Actors’ Theatre Camp co-founding director Shawn Ryan welcomes guests to the showcase at the end of the weekend in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. Magali Gauthier/Special to SFGATE

Founded by Ryan and John Ainsworth in 2001, YATC offers young performers a chance to retreat into an idyllic outdoor camp environment, living and learning alongside each other while being introduced to a variety of artistic disciplines. It has earned accolades for offering a creative space free of judgment, featuring everything from classical theater training to guest clinics with Hollywood producers, leaving young people with mentorship, artistic skills and newfound confidence. 

In 2005, the camp began including drag as part of its themed group dinners, encouraging campers to raid the costume closet and let their imaginations run wild.

“We have always noted to the kids that boys can dress like girls, girls can dress like boys. Anyone can dress however they want. You can be a unicorn!” Ryan said with a laugh. “But it’s really about freedom of expression, including choosing not to dress up. Some kids choose that, and it’s awesome, too.”

Over the years, drag night grew into a bigger fascination at camp, with more young people familiar with the art form (according to Ryan, a common influence seems to be “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” now in its 15th season). Drag dinner evolved into dinner and a drag show; buoyed by the response, YATC began inviting drag queens to teach campers about developing personas, honing a routine, and the meaning of “slay.”

"The Art of Drag" workshop participant Green Tee Zesty wears a necklace adorned with flowers at the Youth Actor's Theatre Camp in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. 
"The Art of Drag" workshop participant Cherry Bomb puts mascara on before the Youth Actor's Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. 
"The Art of Drag" workshop participant Cherry Bomb dances during the Youth Actor's Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. 
A student in "The Art of Drag" weekend workshop wears sparkly heeled booties while performing in the Youth Actor's Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. 

(Magali Gauthier/Special to SFGATE)

Teaching drag

One of those drag artists, Casi, led a master class during last summer’s camp and walked away impressed by the verve of her students. She pitched Ryan the idea of a standalone curriculum for YATC’s spring session, and the duo began brainstorming how to implement the plan. 

“Drag is just a form of acting — it’s a creative, powerful, personal form of self-expression. It allows you to search inside yourself and explore aspects that you may be afraid to dig into. I often say that we’re hiding pieces of ourselves or pretending to be different things to different people,” Casi said. “But drag allows you to pinpoint something you love feeling and doing, and then exaggerate it. It’s a safe space to be overly confident, to be sassy and free.” 

Though she has a background in theater and musical training, Casi was inadvertently introduced to drag through the Pulitzer-nominated artist Taylor Mac, with whom she collaborated on multiple productions. Over the past decade, Casi has honed her craft by immersing herself into the drag community, and her experiences form the basis of the weekend curriculum, which has as much to do with the historical foundations and theory of drag as it does actual performance. 

Casi, “The Art of Drag” workshop instructor, left, adds the finishing touches to Dior Dionne’s makeup before the Young Actors’ Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. 
Casi, “The Art of Drag” workshop instructor, left, adds the finishing touches to Dior Dionne’s makeup before the Young Actors’ Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. Magali Gauthier/Special to SFGATE

“The No. 1 thing the campers asked about was, ‘When are we doing makeup?’ I said, ‘Makeup? You don’t know who you are yet in drag,’” Casi said.

Instead, she led the campers through a history of drag, from its Shakespearean origins (a shortening of the stage directions “dressed as a girl”) to the Stonewall riots of 1969. They discussed drag as a potent form of empowerment for queer men amid rampant oppression, and how it evolved into an art form that now includes cis straight men and women, transgender people and nonbinary people. They learned about the radical activism of Marsha P. Johnson, who fought for civil rights and used drag as a weapon against discrimination. They watched the film adaptation of the Broadway musical “Everybody’s Talking About Jamie,” which chronicles the life of a 16-year-old who is bullied for his love of drag but ultimately prevails through courage and acceptance. 

Then, finally, Casi led the campers into the process of developing a drag persona, teaching them how to move their hands, bodies and faces. Each camper was told to bring songs that inspire joy in them, and Casi helped choreograph routines to these songs, preparing the campers for a grand finale drag show in front of their loved ones on Sunday.

A lesson in self-expression

All along, Casi stressed that drag is a flexible tool of free expression. “I told them, if you don’t feel comfortable thinking about your drag persona as a different gender, think about it as a character. You can be like Juliet from ‘Romeo and Juliet’, and make it extreme,” she said. “You’re exploring every element to its fullest, exaggerated extent. It’s similar to when young artists study clowning. We’re learning how to embody a newfound confidence.” 

Dior Dionne performs “Money, Money, Money” by ABBA at the Young Actors’ Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. 
Dior Dionne performs “Money, Money, Money” by ABBA at the Young Actors’ Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. Magali Gauthier/Special to SFGATE

That embodiment is especially crucial for young people who are often harassed because of the ways they choose to express themselves, and the tension has only grown worse with a swell of vicious national discourse regarding gender identity, queerness and youth development. Despite the well-documented harms of suppressing gender and sexual expression, a variety of agitators continue to call for the persecution of “deviants,” using a tidal wave of misinformation and propaganda to bring their message into mainstream media and threaten lives and livelihoods. The rhetoric is affecting real-world policy and politics, but the influence is also felt at school, where bullying language and slurs heard at home are used to isolate young people who stick out. 

It’s this pressure that pushed 13-year-old Maddie and her mother Kim to seek out the YATC weekend camp, hoping it would spark a recovery from a school year stained by trauma and hatred. By all accounts, seventh grade in Montana has been a nightmarish time for Maddie, who has faced cyberbullying from peers and slurs uttered in hallways for being in the LGBT community. She has long had a fascination with theater, including a newer interest in drag — but the crushing toll of harassment made Maddie recede into a shell, Kim said. 

Kim’s voice rises into an emotional crackle when she describes how the school’s faculty has failed to support her daughter. She realized the extent of the problem when Maddie won the school’s science fair, but remained visibly terrified of presenting at the state competition, even telling her father that she would “rather die.” 

“The Art of Drag” workshop participant Twozie performs in the Young Actors’ Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023.
“The Art of Drag” workshop participant Twozie performs in the Young Actors’ Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023.Magali Gauthier/Special to SFGATE

“So I said, screw it. We are not doing the science fair,” Kim said. “I thought we needed to have her miss school and do something different because she’s had a very difficult year. So the drag camp felt like the most extreme way to put her in a place where she feels accepted.” 

Finding confidence

It didn’t take long for Maddie to feel a kinship with Casi, Ryan and her drag camp peers. Over the course of Saturday, she discovered the core elements of her drag character and settled on a vivid nom de plume: Cherry Bomb. She picked out a costume comprising a skirt, a retro Kiss shirt, a stunning red wig and sunglasses. The hardest part was picking out a song to perform to, Maddie said — “Some of my favorite songs have really adult lyrics,” she noted with a giggle. But she went with a simple declaration of intent: “Confident,” by Demi Lovato (who identifies as queer and pansexual).  

“Some places, I just can’t really be myself because of others around me. But I had a realization that I can make a character in drag and have it be the more confident version of me,” Maddie said. “It meant I could walk down that stage with real confidence and actually be happy, without any desire to hide. It was a great, great feeling to be my own person.” 

“The Art of Drag” workshop participant Cherry Bomb performs “Confident” by Demi Lovato during the Young Actors’ Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. 
“The Art of Drag” workshop participant Cherry Bomb performs “Confident” by Demi Lovato during the Young Actors’ Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. Magali Gauthier/Special to SFGATE

The seven campers convened on Sunday, April 1, to hold a drag finale in front of their family and the 40 or so campers who participated in other weekend YATC programs. It wasn’t a smooth day for everyone: Kiara, for one, struggled with feelings of being overwhelmed and underprepared, and broke down in tears. Kiara had prepared a vibrant drag persona by the name of Dior Dionne — a haughty, old-money fashionista with little patience for the plebeians around her. On Sunday, however, Kiara began feeling an undercurrent of doubt. It started to spiral when she slipped while applying her makeup, leaving a blemish. Then, as if by fate, she ripped her bag of belongings while packing. The perfect day in her mind was starting to unfurl. 

But Kiara notes that her “drag mama” Casi swooped in, ready to fix her makeup and proffer words of love and encouragement. It steeled her nerves, allowing her to focus on all the joy she had put into creating Dior Dionne. And by the time the initial chords of ABBA’s iconic “Money, Money, Money” began blaring over the speakers, Kiara was ready to dance, pout and preen in front of a crowd, throwing fake cash and lip-syncing as the cheers rang out around her. 

“One of the things I’ve always loved about drag is the clothing — I would dress like that more often if I felt like I could. It just feels natural. But actually, playing the character felt really, really good,” Kiara said. “To put on a performance and feel amazing afterward, like just with the applause and smiles, it … it just felt amazing.”

The ‘blood-boiling’ moment

The campers didn’t know it at the time, but their performance was, in a sense, an act of resistance — especially given that YATC began seeing cruel comments aimed at the drag camp online. An inflammatory post on Facebook about the weekend went viral on Saturday, leading to agitation from around the country, Ryan said. He spent the evenings during the camp working furiously to take down posts that advocated hate, including a clip from one livestreamer who threatened to drive to the Santa Cruz camp and disrupt it. Ultimately, YATC had to explain to parents what was unfolding, how to report any harassment, and why the organization could keep its young campers safe. 

Students in “The Art of Drag” Young Actors’ Theatre Camp workshop and their instructor hold hands and discuss the safe space they’ve created over the weekend in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. 
Students in “The Art of Drag” Young Actors’ Theatre Camp workshop and their instructor hold hands and discuss the safe space they’ve created over the weekend in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. Magali Gauthier/Special to SFGATE

It was a “blood-boiling” moment for Andrew, who was forced to confront the risk that his child Kiara may be in danger simply for daring to exist among like-minded people. Likewise, Kim notes that she was “in disbelief” over the rhetoric on social media, which claimed that YATC parents were sexual predators working to pervert impressionable minds. This, despite the fact that drag is not inherently sexual in form and intent (and especially ironic given that drag has been a staple of, among other spaces, the American military through much of the 20th century). 

It was also an emotional precipice for Ryan, who felt torn between his own anger and desire to fight, and the need to stay calm and prioritize the young campers. In the weeks following the weekend camp, he has continued to receive an “unprecedented” amount of hate mail and disruptive phone calls, with some people unleashing torrents of slurs and nonsensical accusations. 

“It’s an interesting position to be in — to be able to push the ‘fight’ just by continuing to live our lives and teaching people about the art form and sharing,” Ryan says. “I thought for so long, what should I do? Should I get aggressive? Should I, gosh, get back to every single hateful person and try to change their mind?” 

Instead, Ryan and Casi have confronted the fact that the best thing to do is just keep going, with an additional eye toward security and safety at the camp. “As someone who has long been shy when it comes to political conversation, and avoided conflict out of fear, I feel like continuing to educate is the only way I can effect change,” Casi adds.

The show must go on

Despite the horror of imagining their children under further attack, what remains at top of mind for Andrew and Kim is the vision of their kids on stage on Sunday, unfettered by doubt and embracing their own agency. Being immersed in the applause of peers and parents was a formative experience for all involved, they said. 

Casi, “The Art of Drag” workshop instructor, center, helps her students get ready for the Young Actors’ Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. 
Casi, “The Art of Drag” workshop instructor, center, helps her students get ready for the Young Actors’ Theatre Camp showcase in Ben Lomond on April 2, 2023. Magali Gauthier/Special to SFGATE

“When Kiara was performing in drag, it was maybe the happiest and most engaged and most gratified Kiara I’ve ever seen,” Andrew said.

Tears kept flowing when the campers picked a loved one in the crowd to dance with them, parading them around the room to the triumphant rhythm of RuPaul’s “Cover Girl.” 

“I cried and cried when she was up there,” Kim said. “She got her voice back. I got my daughter back.” 

The impact of the weekend has had rippling effects in the month since. Not all of it is idyllic — Maddie and Kim are still contending with their “insanely homophobic” Montana community, and Andrew worries about what challenges Kiara will face while continuing to grow and explore her identity, even if they do live in California. Ryan remains vigilant about countering hate speech and threats toward YATC, and Casi anticipates her own family could see harassment because of her work as a drag instructor. 

Beyond the negativity, however, is an effusive sensation that drag camp is a haven in a world rife with ignorance. RuPaul once declared that “drag doesn’t change who you are, it actually reveals who you are.” In that vein, Kiara found faith in her own abilities as well as new friends, and Maddie changed the course of her seventh-grade year by rediscovering her sense of pride. 

“I just can’t wait to go back,” Maddie said.

Spain’s new ‘transgender’ law breaks new ground on LGBTIQ+ rights

https://www.euronews.com/2023/04/06/how-spains-transgender-law-is-changing-the-lives-of-those-affected

By Valérie Gauriat  & Davide Rafaelle Lobina  •  Updated: 11/04/2023

A new law in Spain allows people to freely change gender from age 16. Euronews reports on what this means for the children, adults and families concerned.

A new national law for “real and effective equality for trans people” came into force in Spain on 2 March 2023, allowing a person to change their gender identity in the civil register without undergoing a two-year hormonal treatment or obtaining a medical diagnosis of gender dysphoria, as required by previous legislation.

Euronews reporters Valerie Gauriat and Davide Rafaelle Lobina travelled to Madrid to hear the testimonies of those who are affected by the law.

Ezekiel: Gender transition ‘not a decision you take lightly’

Ezekiel is a 23-year-old sports coach whose dream is to become a firefighter. But behind his athletic figure lie years of inner struggle, as Ezekiel was born a woman. 

He started his physical transformation after years of feeling like he didn’t belong in his own skin. 

“I looked in the mirror and thought to myself that I couldn’t take it anymore. I needed to talk to people about it, to be recognized for who I was, and that I had to start my transition to feel comfortable with myself”.

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Ezekiel started hormone therapy two and a half years ago, and underwent a mastectomy.

“It’s a big change. It’s like jumping into the void, hoping there is some water below,” Ezekiel told Euronews. “It is a very difficult process. It is not a decision you take lightly.”

Thanks to the new law, Ezekiel is glad that he will be officially recognised as a man. Spain is one of the few European countries that allow citizens to determine their official gender through a simple administrative declaration. 

We followed Ezekiel to the Madrid Civil Register Office, where he submitted his gender change request; he will have a new identity card in three months, aftger ratifying his demand.

“I’m happier than ever!”, he exclaimed, coming out of the Register office.”This will make a lot of things easier. I won’t have to give all sorts of explanations when applying for a job for instance. It will also help with my courses to become a fireman; my diploma will be consistent with my gender,” he explains.

Euronews
Ezekiel Latorre Fernandez, 23, sports coach: “Happy as ever”Euronews

The new law for broke all the locks remaining the previous legislation.

Like the World Health Organization, it depathologizes transsexuality.

And allows self-determination of gender on simple request from the age of 16, and with parental consent from the age of 12.

A first in the European Union. And one of the most controversial points of the law.

“At 16 people can work, have sexual relations, abort; they should also be able to chose their gender”

Spain’s Ministry of Equality claims it’s Europe’s most progressive law LGBTIQ+ rights

“In Spain, at 16 people can work, they can have sexual relations, women can have an abortion if they want”, said  Secretary of State for Equality, Ángela Rodríguez Martínez. “It is reasonable that people should also be able to declare their own gender. In addition, this law dissociates the change of sex in the civil register from the need to take hormones or undergo any type of surgical intervention. In the event of a change of mind, it would just be a matter of canceling the change at the register with all the legal guarantees needed.”

Arguments which do not convince those who feel the new law is too lax.

Vicenta Esteve Biot is  a member of the working group on transsexuality at the General Council of Psychology of Spain. For this psychologist, the abolition of medico-psychological diagnoses for sex change in the civil register could encourage too hasty transitions.

“The problem with this law is that it does not leave time to reflect. It’s not the same thing to follow a process accompanied by a professional who can help you make your own decisions when you need to make them, and not before or in a rush. People need to make well-considered decisions. And not just trans people, but also families. There are parents who take the initiative to avoid the suffering of their children. And it’s just as bad to be ahead of your kids as it is to be behind and holding them back. »

Encarni Bonilla Huete: ‘The problem is society, not gender identity’

Encarni Bonilla Huete is the president of the Chrysallis Association, which brings together families with transgender children who are fighting against stigmatisation. 

“Our youths are increasingly diverse and demand diversity. Either we adapt to it or we move further apart from them,” she said.

She explains that her 12-year-old son Marc “was assigned the wrong sex at birth and that 18 months ago he was able to express that he was a boy.”

Encarni and her husband decided to support his transition, after he verbalised it and asked them for help.

 “I knew I was out of place somehow, but I didn’t know how to express myself. When I started to develop, I felt very bad.I didn’t want to see my body.” explains Marc. And then when I realized I was a boy, I felt much better. My relationship with my parents, with my friends, with myself is now much better. » Asked whether he thinks about the future, Marc briefly ponders and smiles:

“Sometimes I think about what it will be like to take hormones, what people will think of me when I go to school, or what it will be like to work as a trans person. The world may be very different tomorrow. Anything can happen. I try to focus on the present. »

His mother is adamant that the family’s life has changed for the better. 

“He had an inner rage that prevented him from being happy. All that has disappeared, and he’s a very happy child now.” says Encarni. “It’s not gender identity that’s the problem, it is society, which doesn’t accept diversity and doesn’t accept difference. And that’s why it must evolve,” she added.

Euronews
Encarni Bonilla Huete, supportive of Marc’s transitionEuronews

“I’m asking those who are against my transition to let me live my life. They shouldn’t speak about it as they don’t know what it’s like, and I’m asking them to let me be happy,” concludes Marc.

Nebraska forbade cops from stealing cash from motorists, but a loophole let them carry on doing it

Seward County has become Nebraska’s capital of “civil forteiture,” in which Sheriffs deputies pull over out-of-state motorists, confiscate any cash they find, and send them on their way without charging them with crimes. Though the state banned the practice years ago, a loophole in the law’s wording effectively nullifies it and there’s little point fighting to get the money back because local courts won’t give it to you.

In the past decade, Seward has seized money in at least 90 state civil forfeiture cases, nearly double any other Nebraska county. In those cases, they initially seized a total of $2.2 million from motorists. Drivers rarely fight to get their money back. Those who do rarely win, according to court records. The $2 million kept by the county was split. Half went to a state fund for schools. Half went to a county fund overseen by a board of police chiefs, the Nebraska State Patrol, the county attorney and the sheriff. Records from meetings of that board, held at a Pizza Kitchen in Milford, detail how they decided to spend the seized dollars.They bought stun guns and bulletproof vests for the Seward and Milford Police Departments. They bought a sheriff’s cruiser with the words “Paid for by drug proceeds” emblazoned on the back. They bought an $18,000 drone for the Nebraska State Patrol. And they recently spent $15,000 on two ballistic shields, bought after the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas.

Thieves, plain and simple. The deputies doing it, the Sheriffs running it, and the judges rubber-stamping it all know what they are up to.

Ron DeSantis Is All In—on Creating an American Autocracy

His plan to outflank Trump would scale up the calculated system of repression he designed in Florida.

New Hampshire officials investigating protest outside drag story hour in Concord

https://www.wmur.com/amp/article/new-hampshire-white-supremacist-protest-drag-story-hour/44257286

Attorney general’s office identified the protesters as members of NSC-131, which the Anti-Defamation League calls a neo-Nazi group


Hannah Cotter 
 

News Reporter

https://d-12915471552529622588.ampproject.net/2305252018001/frame.html

There is a video at the link.   Notice these people were saving children by scaring them by, people are yelling, banging on the windows and doing Nazi salutes while holding a sign that says, “defend white communities,  Hugs

CONCORD, N.H. —

The New Hampshire Attorney General’s office said it’s looking into an incident outside of a café in Concord.

Cell phone video shows a group of people protesting outside of the Teatotaller on Sunday while the café was hosting its monthly drag story hour event.

“All we were doing was promoting literacy and providing kids with cute, good stories,” drag queen Juicy Garland said.

In the videos, people are yelling, banging on the windows and doing Nazi salutes while holding a sign that says, “defend white communities,” all while a drag performer was inside reading books to families.

“I’m sure that was a lot more scary than anything else for the children that were here,” Liam Magan, Teatotaller general manager, said.

This Teatotaller location just opened up a year ago, and they started hosting these events in November.

But the owner said this isn’t the first time they’ve gotten pushback.

“It’s not the first time. It’s not the second time. It’s not the third time,” said Emmett Soldati, owner of Teatotaller. “But the truth is that we have been doing this kind of programming basically since we have existed in the state of New Hampshire, which is over a decade. And at the end of the day, we are going to continue doing programming that the community loves.”

The attorney general’s office has identified the protesters as members of NSC-131, which the Anti-Defamation League calls a neo-Nazi group, and said its civil rights unit is looking into the incident.

Juicy Garland, the drag queen who was reading at Sunday’s event, said this reaction won’t stop her from doing what she loves.

“I will be back and we will continue to do these,” Juicy Garland said. “If anything, I’m only more encouraged by these people to continue doing what we do.”

Teatotaller management told News 9 that safety is their main priority and that they hope this type of reaction won’t stop people from wanting to come here.

Management said they’re not letting protesters stop them from hosting more events like this in the future because they say there’s a need for more inclusive spaces.

Police said no arrests were made on Sunday.

Teatotaller says it won’t be influenced by Neo-Nazi protest outside of Concord cafe

https://www.concordmonitor.com/NSC-131-protests-drag-queen-story-hour-at-Teatotaller-51362496

These people claim that a person in a costume reading to kids is harmful to the kids, yet think screaming white supremacist Nazi gang thugs is fine for the kids.  It terrifies them, which is the point.  Cause the kids and parents so much fear they won’t go to these events.  As I posted about this the other day, the police were there but did not interfere with the acts of intimidation and terrorism on the part of the Nazis.   Hugs

Juicy Garland reads a children’s book to customers upstairs at Teatotaller while NSC-131 protests outside. Jacqueline Cole / Monitor staff

Members of NSC-131, a neo-Nazi group in New England, protest story hour outside Teatotaller cafe in downtown Concord. Jacqueline Cole / Monitor staff

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Teatotaller in downtown Concord, a “queer, hipster oasis” cafe. Jacqueline Cole

More than a dozen masked men clad in black chanted Nazi salutes as they stood outside Teatotaller cafe Sunday on Main Street. Meanwhile, drag Queen Juicy Garland read story books to a small group of children and parents upstairs, seemingly unfazed.  

The men, who did not give their names, identified themselves as members of the neo-Nazi group NSC-131 and held a banner declaring, “Defend White Communities.”

Teatotaller describes itself as “an oasis of queer, hipster, tea, coffee, and pastry goodness.” The cafe opened in June of 2022 and is a beacon of color and inclusivity.

Its bright pink door and “you are loved” pride flag are hard to miss in downtown Concord, but on Sunday they were partially blocked by members of NSC-131 (Nationalist Social Club), a neo-Nazi group with chapters throughout New England. The group “seeks to form an underground network of white men who are willing to fight against their perceived enemies through localized direct actions,” according to the Anti-Defamation League’s website

“Off our streets!” NSC-131 members shouted repeatedly, facing the glass windows of the cafe. Police at the scene said it was unclear whether or not they were armed. No arrests were made. 

In addition to police, community volunteers wearing neon yellow “peacekeeper” vests encouraged offended onlookers to disengage.

Upstairs at Teatotaller, Juicy Garland read “Florence and Her Fantastic Family Tree”by Judy Gilliam to the group who went for Sunday reading hour. One family of three listened to the story, wearing matching shirts that said “proud of my family.”

The men wearing hats with the number 131, said story hour was intended to “groom” young children, and continually shouted slurs at people walking in and out of the cafe.

The protesters did not stop Teatotaller from continuing with their business as usual, despite protestors’ strong, deep chants and visible presence on the sidewalk.

One man, who identified himself as Ted, walked back and forth between the cafe tables and the protesters. He said he was there because he heard about the protest and wanted to protect the children inside Teatotaller.

Teatotaller doesn’t get this reaction every time they host a Sunday story hour, but in November it was swarmed by the Proud Boys while the same guest, Juicy Garland, read stories.

Teatotaller issued a blanket statement in response to events outside the cafe:

“Only recently has there emerged a small band of self-identified white supremacists who have disrupted these events to gain clout. They have not and will not deter us from continuing to provide a safe and enjoyable environment for all Granite Staters to be proud of and recognize they belong here.”

Inside its vibrant exterior, the cashier served coffee and vegan treats to customers and chanted along with the protesters in jest, humming, “off our streets,” while he swiped a credit card.