Happy LGBTQIAP+ Pride Month!

Rawhide "Doug" Kobayashi

Сила бога-нам подмога

Japan court upholds same-sex marriage ban​

A Japanese court has dismissed a collective lawsuit by several same-sex couples, thus upholding the gay marriage ban


A district court in the city of Osaka ruled on Monday that Japan’s ban on same-sex marriage was not unconstitutional, rejecting arguments made by three same-sex couples who filed the suit. The court also dismissed the plaintiffs’ demand for 1 million yen ($7,400) in damages for each pair.

“From the perspective of individual dignity, it can be said that it is necessary to realize the benefits of same-sex couples being publicly recognized through official recognition,” the court ruling said.

Still, the present legislation recognizing unions only between a man and a woman is “not considered to violate... the constitution,” the court added, noting that “public debate on what kind of system is appropriate for this has not been thoroughly carried out.” Japan’s constitution establishes that “marriage shall be only with the mutual consent of both sexes.”



The plaintiffs blasted the court’s ruling, expressing fears that the decision would further complicate the lives of same-sex couples.

“I actually wonder if the legal system in this country is really working,” said plaintiff Machi Sakata, who married her US-citizen partner overseas. “I think there's the possibility this ruling may really corner us,” she added.

The rejected lawsuit was part of a coordinated action of filings by multiple same-sex couples in district courts across Japan back in 2020. The Osaka case is the second one to make it to a hearing. The first suit, heard by a Sapporo district court last March, yielded the opposite outcome.

Back then, the court ruled the same-sex marriage ban to be discriminatory and that the rights and privileges granted under marriage should “equally benefit both homosexuals and heterosexuals.” The Sapporo court, however, did reject the plaintiffs’ demand for 1 million yen in compensation from the government.

While Japan has a far more liberal stance on homosexuality than most of its Asian neighbors, it still lags far behind the West in this respect. Same-sex couples cannot get married legally, although several municipalities and prefectures issue rather symbolic same-sex partnership certificates. The certificates do not offer any legal recognition but provide some benefits, such as ensuring hospital visitation rights and helping with renting property.
 

Rawhide "Doug" Kobayashi

Сила бога-нам подмога


The World Health Organization (WHO) has now confirmed nearly 100 cases of monkeypox in over a dozen countries, with the largest number in the UK. While most cases so far are among gay and bisexual men, health officials emphasise that anyone can contract the virus through close personal contact.




The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) reported the first case in the current outbreak on 7 May in a man who had recently travelled to Nigeria, where monkeypox is endemic. This was soon followed by two additional cases who share a household and four cases among gay and bisexual men, all of whom appear to have contracted the virus locally. As of 23 May, UKHSA has reported 70 confirmed cases in England and one in Scotland.



The latest WHO update on 21 May listed 92 confirmed and 28 suspected cases. After the UK, the most cases have been reported in Spain and Portugal, with smaller numbers in several other European countries, Canada, the United States and Australia. An informal tally by Global.health, compiled from various sources, listed more than 300 confirmed or suspected cases worldwide as of 25 May.

Cases so far have “mainly but not exclusively been identified amongst men who have sex with men,” according to WHO. Among the Global.health cases with a known sex and age, all but three are young or middle-aged men. Many of the affected men identify as gay or bisexual or sought care at sexual health clinics. Several cases are reportedly linked to a sauna in Spain and a fetish festival in Belgium. Many of the men reported recent international travel.

Monkeypox background​

Monkeypox, which is related to smallpox, is not a new disease. Despite its name, it is most commonly associated with rodents. Although primarily seen in Central and West Africa, isolated cases are occasionally reported in Europe and elsewhere, often involving travellers. The current outbreak is the largest ever seen outside of Africa.

Smallpox vaccination prevents monkeypox as well, and monkeypox cases have been rising over the past few decades since routine smallpox vaccination was discontinued; WHO declared that smallpox had been eradicated worldwide in 1980. This means only older people have vaccine-induced immunity.




Less severe than smallpox, monkeypox typically causes flu-like symptoms (e.g., fever, fatigue, muscle aches), swollen lymph nodes and a rash. The rash can appear on the face, genitals, palms, soles of the feet and elsewhere on the body. The sores can be flat, raised or pus-filled, and may resemble other conditions such as herpes, syphilis or chickenpox. In the current outbreak, several cases initially presented with a genital rash, and some did not report other symptoms. The virus has an incubation period of up to three weeks, and the illness typically lasts two to four weeks.

More news from Western and Central Europe
The monkeypox virus is transmitted through close personal contact, including skin-to-skin contact and kissing. Close contact may involve household members and health care workers. The virus can also spread via clothes or linens that have been in contact with fluid from sores. Health officials say monkeypox can be transmitted via respiratory droplets at close range, but the virus does not appear to spread through the air over longer distances in the same way as the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

Monkeypox is generally not considered a sexually transmitted infection, and it is not known whether it can be transmitted through semen during intercourse. “Monkeypox is not a sexually transmitted infection in the typical sense, but it can be transmitted during sexual and intimate contact,” Dr John Brooks, an epidemiologist with the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said during a 23 May media briefing.

Experts historically thought monkeypox was not easily transmitted between humans, and it is unclear why it is now spreading more extensively. Some have suggested the virus may have evolved to become more easily transmissible, but so far genetic sequencing does not support this hypothesis. More likely, the virus entered a social or sexual network by chance and found favourable conditions for transmission.

Public health advice​

Health officials are urging anyone with an unusual rash or lesions on any part of their body, especially the genitals, to contact their health care provider or a sexual health clinic. People who suspect they may have monkeypox are advised to refrain from close social contact until they get tested. High-risk contacts of known cases should isolate and self-monitor for symptoms for up to 21 days. People with confirmed monkeypox should isolate, abstain from sexual activity and avoid close physical contact until the rash heals completely, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC).

“If anyone suspects they might have rashes or lesions on any part of their body, particularly if they have recently had a new sexual partner, they should limit their contact with others and contact NHS 111 or their local sexual health service as soon as possible—though please phone ahead before attending in person,” said UKHSA chief medical adviser Dr Susan Hopkins.

People with monkeypox usually recover without treatment. The strain circulating in Europe has a fatality rate of around 1%; there have been no deaths reported in the current outbreak. Monkeypox is more likely to cause severe illness in children, pregnant women and immunocompromised people.

Dr Claire Dewsnap, President of the British Association for Sexual Health and HIV, talks about monkeypox in aidsmapCHAT.
However, people with HIV who are on antiretroviral treatment with viral suppression and a CD4 count above 200 “are not at any particular risk of becoming significantly more unwell,” Dr Claire Dewsnap, president of the British Association for Sexual Health and HIV, said during a 23 May aidsmapCHAT.

“There is little data currently to gauge the impact of HIV on morbidity and mortality associated with monkeypox,” according to the European AIDS Clinical Society. “It is likely that persons with advanced and uncontrolled HIV may be at a higher risk of severe disease and prolonged viral shedding.”

Monkeypox can be controlled through ring vaccination, in other words targeted smallpox vaccination for close contacts of an infected individual. The outbreak has spurred calls for resuming universal smallpox vaccination, but experts say this is not necessary to control monkeypox in the general population at this time.

The older live smallpox vaccine (made from a virus called vaccinia) can cause adverse events, especially in immunocompromised people, but there is a newer, safer non-replicating smallpox and monkeypox vaccine (brand names Imvanex or Jynneos). It was approved by European and US regulators in 2013 and 2019 respectively, and is recommended for use in the current outbreak by UK authorities. The UK and other countries maintain a stockpile of smallpox vaccine in case of bioterrorism and are increasing their supplies.

Smallpox vaccines are now being given to high-risk contacts of known cases and health care providers. Because the monkeypox incubation period is so long, vaccination up to two weeks after exposure can reduce the risk of symptomatic infection or severe illness. The new vaccine has been tested and shown to be safe for people with HIV. For people on antiretrovirals with a high CD4 count, Dewsnap advised, “If you’re offered a smallpox vaccine, you should take it.”

Antiviral medications used to treat smallpox can also be used for monkeypox, including tecovirimat (TPOXX), which prevents viral egress from cells, and the nucleoside analogues cidofovir (Vistide; familiar as a treatment for cytomegalovirus retinitis) and brincidofovir (Tembexa).

Health officials and researchers are still learning about the ongoing outbreak, but monkeypox does not spread as easily as COVID-19, and most do not expect a new pandemic of that scale. Experts expect monkeypox cases to increase as new people within social and sexual networks are exposed and previously-exposed individuals move through the incubation period. But they hope contact tracing, isolation and vaccination can bring the outbreak under control.

Based on an ECDC epidemiological assessment, “the likelihood of monkeypox spreading in persons having multiple sexual partners in the European Union/European Economic Area is considered high.” But given that the disease has so far been mild, the overall risk is considered moderate for this group and low for the broader population.

Meanwhile, many in the LGBT community are concerned that a disease primarily striking gay and bisexual men could lead to the same kind of blame and stigma seen with HIV and AIDS. Acknowledging who is most affected is important for targeting education and resources, but stigma could discourage ill or exposed people from seeking care, and calling it a “gay disease” could lead others to assume they’re not at risk.

“It’s a virus – it doesn’t choose, it doesn’t judge, it doesn’t have any morality to it,” aidsmap executive director Matthew Hodson said. “Fight the disease, don’t fight people who might be a greater risk for acquiring the infection.”
 

Rawhide "Doug" Kobayashi

Сила бога-нам подмога
A major blow to the crossdressing millieu:


The world swimming body effectively bans transgender women from women's events

FINA, the world governing body for swimming, has voted to effectively ban transgender women from participating in women's swimming competitions.

The vote — with 71.5% approval at the FINA Extraordinary General Congress 2022 in Budapest — was the latest salvo in an ongoing fight over whether trans athletes should compete according to their gender identity or their sex assigned at birth.

"We have to protect the rights of our athletes to compete, but we also have to protect competitive fairness at our events, especially the women's category at FINA competitions," FINA's president, Husain Al-Musallam, said in a statement.

Under the policy, transgender women must show that "they have not experienced any part of male puberty beyond Tanner Stage 2 or before age 12, whichever is later," a move that effectively eliminates their eligibility to compete in the women's category. Tanner Stages describe the physical changes people undergo during puberty.
FINA said it was necessary to use sex and sex-linked traits to determine eligibility criteria because of the "performance gap" that appears between males and females during puberty.

"Without eligibility standards based on biological sex or sex-linked traits, we are very unlikely to see biological females in finals, on podiums, or in championship positions; and in sports and events involving collisions and projectiles, biological female athletes would be at greater risk of injury," the policy reads.

The group said it devised the policy in consultation with athletic, scientific and legal experts.


The announcement was met with swift criticism from some transgender advocacy groups.

Anne Lieberman, director of policy and programs at Athlete Ally, an organization that advocates for LGBTQI+ equality in sports, called the policy "discriminatory, harmful, unscientific" and contrary to International Olympic Committee guidance.

"The eligibility criteria for the women's category as it is laid out in the policy police the bodies of all women, and will not be enforceable without seriously violating the privacy and human rights of any athlete looking to compete in the women's category," Lieberman said.

The Human Rights Campaign said the decision was a "blatant attack on transgender athletes who have worked to comply with longstanding policies that have allowed them to participate for years without issue."

Last year, the International Olympic Committee released new guidance allowing individual sports to set guidelines and moving away from eligibility based on testosterone levels.

A debate over fairness and inclusion in swimming and other sports has been ongoing after a record-breaking season from swimmer Lia Thomas. The transgender University of Pennsylvania swimmer has been accused of having an unfair advantage competing in the women's category.

A number of Republican governors in states including South Carolina, Oklahoma and Arizona have recently signed laws requiring transgender athletes in public schools to compete according to the sex listed on their birth certificates.

FINA said it may also develop an "open" category in future swimming competitions for people who don't meet the criteria for either the men's or women's events.

"FINA will always welcome every athlete. The creation of an open category will mean that everybody has the opportunity to compete at an elite level," Al-Musallam added.

A spokesperson for Al-Musallam told The Associated Press there are currently no transgender women in levels of elite swimming competition.

The new policy takes effect on Monday.
 

Rawhide "Doug" Kobayashi

Сила бога-нам подмога
Disney's latest attempt to socially engineer the world's masses has flopped, due largely in part to banishment from key foreign markets over the lesbian kiss (they always lead with lesbians, I noticed, since I suppose men in dresses aren't palatable enough)

WOKE ‘LIGHTYEAR’ FLOPS IN BOX OFFICE PROVING AMERICANS ARE FED UP WITH WOKENESS​

by BOBBY BURACK about 8 hours ago

Toy Story spinoff Lightyear debuted to a box office total of $51 million over its three-day opening, well below expectations.

“What the hell happened here?” Deadline asked about the disappointing opening weekend for the film.

Do they not know?

As Lightyear bombed in theaters over the weekend, Top Gun: Maverick topped $800 million worldwide. In case Disney and Deadline have yet to notice, Americans still like movies. They just don’t like woke movies.
Maverick portrays the American military positively and does not preach about social justice messaging. The film is fun and patriotic. Meanwhile, Disney/Pixar used the family-friendly Lightyear to send a political message.

According to Variety, Disney decided to include a scene in which two women kiss to protest over the Florida Parental Rights in Education bill.

“[A] kiss between the characters had been cut from the film. Following the uproar surrounding the Pixar employees’ statement and Disney CEO Bob Chapek’s handling of the ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill, however, the kiss was reinstated into the movie last week.”




So Disney changed production plans to use Toy Story as a political megaphone. That’s a rather interesting choice, one that clearly backfired.

Lightyear also, reportedly, refused to cast Tim Allen as the voice of Buzz Lightyear because he has conservative political beliefs.

Top Gun: Maverick is entertainment. Lightyear is entertainment wrapped in social justice messaging. Moviegoers, evidently, prefer the former.

Showing you are on the politically correct side of every issue works on Twitter and in the media, but it fails in the marketplace.

Nothing woke has been successful. Americans have rejected woke movies, woke sports, and woke media. How many more projects and people have to fail for content creators to understand this?

You might think the disparate box offices between Maverick and Lightyear would convince Hollywood studios to change course. However, that would mean you are thinking rationally, and Hollywood does not think rationally. Obviously.

So expect more family films to protest the Florida bill with same-sex kisses and the exclusion of actors like Tim Allen. And, most of all, expect these films to flop as hard as Lightyear did.

The Arab News also has a really good article on this:

As UAE bans ‘Lightyear,’ Disney’s LGBTQ+ agenda irks watchdogs in Middle East and West alike​

DUBAI: Disney and Pixar’s latest movie “Lightyear,” which was slated for a June 16 release, has been banned in the UAE — one of the most liberal countries in the Arab World — over content, including a same-sex intimate scene.

Around 14 other countries across the Middle East and Asia, including Lebanon, Egypt, Kuwait and Malaysia have also banned the film.


While Saudi Arabian media authorities have not yet released an official statement, the UAE’s Media Regulatory Office said that the film would be banned for violating the “country’s media content standards.”

According to industry magazine Variety, “Lightyear” was never submitted to censors in Saudi Arabia, presumably because the producers assumed that it would not pass.

The actual reason for the controversy surrounding the film is believed to be one scene that features a same-sex kiss between the character of Alisha Hawthorne and her female partner — a scene that almost did not make it into the film.

On March 9, LGBTQ+ employees and campaigners at Pixar Animation Studios sent a joint statement to Walt Disney Co. leadership claiming that Disney executives had actively censored “overtly gay affection” in its feature films, reported Variety. According to a source close to the production, the report added, the kiss scene had been cut from the film but was reinstated after the letter.

In a widely shared video report, Saudi state-news channel Al-Ekhbariya went on a hunt for toys carrying the rainbow flag targeting Saudi children.

The reporter in the video asks: “Why do film producers, such as Disney, insist on not removing a scene with a same-sex kiss that only lasts a few seconds? And why do they risk upsetting a whole market which clearly doesn’t support this?”

While the ban has been met with backlash from potential audiences, there are also ardent supporters.

“Umm Lilly,” a Saudi citizen who has a 9-year-old daughter, said she was confused at what she should let her watch.

She told Arab News: “I don’t even know where to start. I want my daughter to paint and color rainbows and watch Disney movies. Simple innocence — there doesn’t need to be subliminal messages in them, she is just a child.”

As some Twitter users pointed, out there are massive cultural differences between Western and Middle Eastern and Asian countries — differences that should be respected, especially by a corporation as big and influential as Disney.

“There are subjects which are very sensitive to populations in the region, and I expect that this will become more commonplace as global content producers share ideas that are not supported or advocated for within the Middle East,” Alex Malouf, a communications professional, told Arab News.

However, according to one advisor to a number of Saudi government media committees, such analysis by what he describes as so-called media experts and Twitter users is both “shallow and out of touch.”

The media advisor told Arab News: “First of all, the issue is not just about a same-sex kiss. The issue with most censors in the Arab World and beyond is the overarching theme of normalizing same-sex relations or transgender issues to children who are not old enough to fully grasp the facts and then make up their own minds.

“So-called media experts or the average Twitter users who argue Disney should be more sensitive because the Arab or Muslim world has different values are both shallow and out of touch with the reality happening in America itself.

“There is a recent study that showed that up to 70 percent of Americans oppose Disney’s woke agenda; there has been a huge trend among US citizens to cancel their Disney+ subscriptions and to many non-Arab, non-Muslim families, Disney is no longer a safe platform for their children,” he concluded, adding that this shows the heated debate over Disney’s content is not exclusive to the MENA region.

The Saudi media advisor’s comments hold true, particularly in the US.

The recent study he referred to was done by the Trafalgar Group, an opinion polling and survey company, which showed that nearly 70 percent of Americans disapproved of Disney’s LGBTQ+ agenda and are unlikely to do business with the company.

Just two days ago, a campaign slamming Disney erected a huge billboard in New York City’s Times Square titled “No Mouse In My House.”

The campaign, Rock the Woke, calls for people to boycott Disney for their “leftist political ideology that has nothing to do with entertaining children and families.”

Meanwhile in Florida, a bill preventing education on sexual orientation and gender identity in kindergarten through to third grade was passed in March.

The bill was strongly opposed by LGBTQ+ advocates and entertainment industry professionals, not to mention Democrat politicians and even the White House.

Disney, however, chose to remain silent. Its employees, though, took to social media to express their outrage and even walked out of offices across the US in retaliation to CEO Bob Chapek’s lack of response.

The company’s position on the bill — or lack of — seemed curious given that there are tens of thousands of Disney employees in Florida, home to Disney’s largest theme park and resort in the world.

Various films have already been banned or censored in the Middle East. Marvel’s “Eternals” was heavily edited, to cut out scenes of same-sex relationships in Lebanon, and banned from screening across cinemas in the UAE and Kuwait.

Films such as “West Side Story” and “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” were also banned in various countries across the region, including the UAE, for including trans and homosexual characters.

The UAE later removed the ban on “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness,” opting instead for a 21+ rating.
 

Rawhide "Doug" Kobayashi

Сила бога-нам подмога
Pride has been officially cancelled in Norway:

Terrified revellers at a gay bar in Oslo hid in a basement and desperately called loved ones as a gunman went on the rampage, killing two people and injuring more than 20 on the day the city was due to celebrate its annual Pride parade...

...A suspect, a 42-year-old Norwegian citizen of Iranian origin, was detained minutes after embarking on the shooting spree, according to police who said they believed he acted alone.

Two weapons, including a fully automatic gun, were retrieved from the crime scene, they added.

"There is reason to think that this may be a hate crime," police said.

"We are investigating whether the Pride was a target in itself or whether there are other motives."

The suspect, who was known to authorities, is believed to be a radicalised Islamist who has a history of mental illness, Norway's PST intelligence service later said.
 
Top