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Trans Youth Erasure Gearing Up (AUDIO)

Last week Ohio's Governor Mike DeWine signed SB 104 into law that includes a bathroom ban provision that prohibits over 8,500 transgender K-12 students in Ohio from using restrooms & locker rooms consistent with their gender identity. On December 4th the Supreme Court consider a case about bodily autonomy & whether the courts have a right to come between patients & medical professionals in United States v. Skrmetti. The court is being asked to consider the legality of Tennessee’s ban on access to best-practice transgender medical care for youth. The case could have far-reaching implications for our LGBTQ community’s nondiscrimination & doctors’ ability to treat their patients without political interference. If the court decides to reject their own logic in Bostock v. Clayton County as it rejected clear & longstanding precedent in Roe v. Wade & deny transgender youth equal protection under the Constitution then bans on transgender medical care will remain in place across the country. Haley Norris, Center for American Progress LGBTQ Policy Analyst stated, “Bans on transgender health care are part of a larger attack on sex discrimination protections that will harm bodily autonomy by restricting reproductive rights & access to medical care, all of which are a part of the far right’s attempts to redefine sex & gender. The fallout of the Skrmetti decision, which likely won’t be released until the summer of 2025, is something that everyone concerned about bodily autonomy should be worried about.” I talked to Southern Equality’s Alexis Stratton about this & other trans issues in this exclusive podcast. LISTEN

Act Up For World AIDS Day 36th (AUDIO)

We’re commemorating the 36th Anniversary of World AIDS Day today on December 1st with a photo by Howard Pope who died of AIDS in the early 90s. Assistant Secretary for Health Admiral Rachel Levine, MD stated, “The theme of this year’s World AIDS Day, ‘Collective Action: Sustain & Accelerate HIV Progress,’ reminds us that we must remain steadfast in our commitment to prevent new HIV infections & provide essential services to all people with HIV. Today, we pause to remember the estimated 39 million individuals around the globe with HIV, including approximately 1.2 million people here in the United States. We also remember the 42 million individuals worldwide who have died from HIV/AIDS. Their stories & their lives will continue to motivate & inform our work to end the HIV epidemic…” According to the World Health Organization more than one million people acquired HIV in 2023 alone. By sharing the story of AIDS we make strides toward ensuring that future communities will not be harmed by fear, silence, discrimination or stigma. Kelsey Louie GMHC CEO stated, “Candlelight vigils, rallies, gatherings & other ways that people can come together—especially on World AIDS Day—remain important because AIDS is not over. When we gather, we support each other to keep going, keep doing the work in all the ways we can & keep persisting & resisting with a collective goal to end AIDS.” I talked to the late Larry Kramer the pioneering co-founder of Gay Men’s Health Crisis & ACT UP in 2018 about his spin on the AIDS crisis that continues in this country & around the world in this exclusive audio byte. LISTEN

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Trans Youth Erasure Gearing Up (AUDIO)

Last week Ohio's Governor Mike DeWine signed SB 104 into law that includes a bathroom ban provision that prohibits over 8,500 transgende...

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