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LGBT

Why Anti-Smoking Campaigns Need To Focus Their Efforts On The LGBT Community

A new report from the Legacy Foundation highlights the lack of structural support within the public health community to combat the disproportionately high rates of smoking among LGBT individuals. Despite the fact that members of the LGBT community are about twice as likely to smoke as their heterosexual counterparts — largely due to minority stress, but also because the tobacco industry has specifically targeted LGBT Americans in their marketing campaigns over the past decade — Legacy notes that mainstream anti-smoking campaigns still tend to lack adequate LGBT representation to ensure their messages are having an impact on that population.

And the LGBT community itself doesn’t have enough infrastructure and capacity to address issues of tobacco use either, partly because LGBT leaders often don’t cite smoking as a pressing health concern for the members of their community. But high rates of smoking — and the subsequent increased risks of asthma attacks, lung cancer, and heart disease — is putting a strain on the well-being of LGBT Americans. According to some estimates, tobacco use causes at least 30,000 gay and lesbian deaths each year (PDF).

“It’s very likely that smoking is the single greatest health issue stealing years off the lives of LGBT people,” Dr. Scout, the director of the Network for LGBT Health Equity, explains in video that Legacy produced to accompany the report. “More LGBT civil rights leaders’ voices have been silenced by tobacco disparities than any other single thing. For me, tobacco is one of the biggest social justice issues.”

Legacy’s video also features Bil Browning, editor of The Bilerico Project, who chronicles his personal struggle to quit smoking. Watch it:

Although the CDC has directed a few of its anti-smoking advertisements at LGBT populations, Legacy’s report recommends that public health organizations can continue to improve their engagement with the LGBT community by focusing more of their research specifically on LGBT smokers and designing their smoking cessation campaigns with LGBT-inclusive messages. And since Big Tobacco currently targets LBGT individuals partly by sponsoring campaigns and events in the community — cultivating a false sense of being allied with LGBT causes — Legacy notes that the public health sector could also step up by providing the LGBT community with alternatives to tobacco industry funding.

Justice

Three Potential Bombs Hidden In The Supreme Court’s Marriage Equality Cases

The constitutional case for marriage equality is simple and straightforward. Under our Constitution, all people are entitled to the “equal protection of the laws,” and that includes gay couples. Moreover, under well-established Supreme Court precedent, minority groups that possess a common trait that they have no control over and who have historically been subject to irrational discrimination are entitled to heightened protection. This is why some of the most conservative judges in the country held the anti-gay Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional.

The opinion the Supreme Court ultimately hands down in June, however, could be anything but simple. On Friday, the Supreme Court did not simply agree to hear arguments on whether DOMA and California’s Proposition 8 are constitutional, they also announced that they are uncertain whether they are even allowed to consider these cases in the first place. This announcement, in addition to a looming issue raised by a lower court, could lead the Court to turn the law into a sloppy mess.

  • Retroactive Vetoes:
  • Last year, the California Supreme Court held that the state’s governor and attorney general could not, acting without anyone else’s support, effectively kill a ballot initiative by refusing to defend it on appeal after a trial court struck it down. The Supreme Court revived a similar issue in both the Prop 8 and the DOMA cases — whether the justices are allowed to hear these appeals in light of the fact that neither the California government nor the U.S. Department of Justice will defend marriage discrimination. In DOJ’s absence, the mantle of defending discrimination has fallen on House Republicans.

    If the justices decide they cannot hear the Prop 8 case, the almost certain impact is that the lower court’s order striking down the anti-gay ballot initiative would stand, and marriage equality would be restored in California. As explained below, things get quite a bit more complicated if the justices decide they cannot resolve the DOMA case, but at least some gay couples would escape the grip of federal marriage discrimination if the Court reaches this conclusion.

    Nevertheless, progressives should not celebrate such an outcome. As the lawsuits challenging the Affordable Care Act proved, it is not difficult for conservatives to find purely ideological judges willing to reach any number of indefensible outcomes. The law’s best defense against lawless judges is the appeals process. If the justices allow that appeals process to be cut short if the government refuses to defend a law — an outcome Obama Justice Department has actively tried to avoid in this case — then there is little preventing a future president from killing anything from Medicare to the Affordable Care Act by finding a trial judge willing to strike the law and then refusing to defend it.

  • Mass Confusion
  • If the justices decide they lack jurisdiction to hear the DOMA appeal, things could get ugly fast. The First and Second Circuit courts, which together encompass New York and New England, both held DOMA unconstitutional, but most Americans live in a circuit where the courts have not resolved this question.

    Striking DOMA only in a few states would not simply deny same-sex couples their basic constitutional rights, it would also be an administrative nightmare. A married same-sex couple that lives in New York would be taxed as a married couple, but what about a similar couple that lives in Maryland? If the New York couple winters in Florida, are they taxed as married or single people? What if they move permanently to Florida half way through the year? If the military transfers a lesbian officer and her wife from a station in New York to one in Kentucky, does the officer’s wife lose her health benefits? Does a wealthy businessman’s husband lose his estate tax exemption if their spouse dies on a trip outside the First or Second Circuit?

    It is possible that the First or Second Circuit could attempt to enjoin the entire federal government from enforcing DOMA — but it is not clear this order would apply nationwide. According to Brian Wolfman, an expert on federal jurisdiction with the Georgetown University Law Center, the Reagan Administration routinely used “non-acquiescence rulings” to avoid paying disability benefits in jurisdictions where their policies had not yet been struck down. President Obama might willingly comply with a nationwide order halting DOMA, but a future president may openly defy it.

  • Looming Tentherism
  • In an otherwise excellent opinion striking down DOMA, the First Circuit also invoked an odd states-rights argument similar to one conservatives have used to attack Medicaid — essentially arguing that DOMA stands on weaker constitutional footing because it might impact state lawmakers’ decision-making. It is possible that conservative justices such as Anthony Kennedy or even Clarence Thomas could attempt to use an opinion striking DOMA as a vehicle to undermine the safety net. Simply put, the wealthiest, most powerful nation that ever existed should not have to choose between the blessings of equality and the promise that no American will die because they cannot afford health care. A justice like Kennedy, however, who has both favored gay rights and opposed access to health care, may see things differently.

    GLSEN Study Reveals Unique Challenges Faced By Rural LGBT Youth

    A new study from the Gay, Lesbian, & Straight Education Network (GLSEN) provides a novel look into the experience of LGBT youth who live in rural areas and don’t access to the same support structures as those in urban or suburban areas. This isolation leads to heightened incidents of student victimization and an unsafe school climate, which in turn negatively impact students’ academic performance and aspirations for post-secondary education.

    Here are some of the chilling findings based on responses from rural LGBT students:

    • Victimization based on sexual orientation at school: 87 percent reported being verbally harassed, 45 percent reported being physically harassed, and 22 percent reported being physically assaulted.
    • Victimization based on gender expression at school: 68 percent reported being verbally harassed, 31 percent reported being physically harassed, and 16 percent reported being physically assaulted.
    • Anti-gay language at school: 91 percent heard “gay” used in a negative way, and 79 percent heard other homophobic remarks (“dyke,” “faggot,” etc.) used frequently or often.
    • Lack of school intervention: Only 13 percent reported that school personnel intervened when they heard homophobic language, and only 11 percent reported similar intervention for negative remarks about gender expression.
    • Lack of peer support: Half as many rural students (27 percent) reported having a gay-straight alliance compared to suburban (55 percent) and urban (53 percent) students.
    • Lack of visibility: Half as many rural students (11 percent) reported having an LGBT-inclusive curriculum, compared to suburban (18 percent) and urban (20 percent) students.

    Compared to suburban and urban LGBT students, those living in rural areas felt less safe at school, had less supportive administrators, had less supportive peers, and were less likely to have policies protecting sexual orientation and gender expression.

    The new report is based on the data GLSEN originally presented in September, which found troubling rates of anti-LGBT bullying and harassment nationwide. The very policies that would help protect students with anti-bullying programs and education are opposed by conservatives based on “religious liberty” grounds. In states like Michigan and Tennessee, the ruling Republican majorities have even tried to pass “license to bully” bills guaranteeing a place for anti-LGBT harassment in schools.

    NEWS FLASH

    Study Finds Biological Causes For Homosexuality | A new study suggests that homosexuality can be explained by biology, though not by genes specifically. Instead, the researchers propose that there are sex-specific epi-marks on the genes that are triggered during fetal development to maintain a hormone level balance. These switches cause fluctuations in DNA expression that impacts sexual development, including sexual identity and various other gender characteristics. These switches help protect both the fetus and the mother from the natural variation in sex hormone levels present during fetal development, which could help explain why homosexuality has evolved as a common variation of human identity.

    Michigan Counseling Program Settles Suit With Anti-Gay Student

    Julea Ward

    Eastern Michigan University has agreed to settle a suit with counseling student Julea Ward who insisted that she could not counsel somebody who was gay without condemning their sexual orientation. When the program expelled her for violating counseling ethics, she sued (with support from the anti-gay Alliance Defending Freedom), and though a district court originally dismissed her complaint, the 6th Circuit ruled in her favor. EMU has agreed to pay a settlement and remove the expulsion from her record.

    Ward argued that it was a violation of her religious beliefs to affirm a gay or lesbian client’s sexual orientation, but claimed she could counsel them on anything else. When such a client sought relationship counseling, she insisted that she should be able to refer that client to another counselor. EMU faculty argued that this constituted two ethics violations: “imposing values that are inconsistent with counseling goals” and “engaging in discrimination based on sexual orientation.” The 6th Circuit argued that “tolerance is a two-way street” for religious beliefs and that there was no negative impact on the client because the client never knew of the referral.

    Unfortunately, the circumstances of the artificial counseling environment that benefited Ward in this case do not reflect the negative impact her approach could easily make in reality, which in turn would reflect on the university’s reputation. The American Psychological Association explains that sexual orientation defines an “essential component of personal identity” for many people. A gay client could start therapy with Ward for a different issue and face her rejection should his concerns arrive at an intersection with his gay identity. If Ward simply avoided serving gay and lesbian clients to prevent this from happening, then she would be engaging in discrimination based on sexual orientation.

    This summer, a federal judge in Georgia ruled against a student who faced a similar conflict in the counseling program at Augusta State University. Judge J. Randal Hall took more careful note of the counseling impact of condemning homosexuality and accused student Jennifer Keeton of conflating “personal and professional values.” By the same standard, Ward is equally guilty of imposing her personal values over what the professional ethics of counseling demand on the question of sexual orientation. Unfortunately, conservatives will now champion her victory to further obfuscate the psychological importance of affirmation for gays and lesbians.

    NEWS FLASH

    Maggie Gallagher Expects To Lose On DOMA | Maggie Gallagher has been one of the most prominent voices speaking out against marriage equality over the past several years, largely thanks to her previous leadership role with the National Organization for Marriage. But Jeremy Hooper noticed that she may be accepting reality and not blindly following her beliefs, because on a comment thread she acknowledged that the Supreme Court may, in fact, overturn the Defense of Marriage Act. Though NOM has doubled down on its delusion that a majority of the country stands with it, Gallagher seems to recognize that public opinion has shifted and recognizing same-sex couples is an understandable ruling for the Supreme Court to support.

    Politico Poll Needlessly Skews Marriage Equality Favorability

     

    A new Politico poll shows similar results as other polls in terms of the public’s support of marriage equality, but it paints an incomplete picture because of a common trap in how it asked its questions. The poll found that 40 percent of people support marriage equality and an additional 30 percent support civil unions, for a total of 70 percent supporting some form of legal recognition of same-sex couples. But this result alone does not address how many individuals are willing to actually support for marriage equality, and it irresponsibly sidesteps the inferior nature of civil unions.

    There’s nothing inherently wrong with inviting survey respondents to offer support for civil unions. In certain states like Colorado, civil unions are an important alternative to advance, because overturning the state’s constitutional ban on same-sex marriage is currently an inaccessible goal. But New Jersey’s Civil Union Review Commission found that the “separate but equal” unions were, in fact, not treated equally as the law suggested they should be. States that passed civil unions in 2011 like Illinois, Delaware, and Rhode Island, are already looking forward to replacing them with full marriage equality, possibly as soon as next year. Civil unions may have provided a “better than nothing” alternative a decade ago to help public sentiment adjust to recognizing same-sex couples, but as public opinion has swiftly shifted, they’ve quickly come to represent a consolation prize short of full equality.

    The pitfall of Politico’s poll is the absence of an opportunity to weigh in on marriage equality without the alternative of civil unions. As a result, the possibility and desirability of civil unions are artificially inflated, even though they are not on the agenda in most states nor at the federal level. In turn, anti-gay conservatives can reframe the poll’s plurality for marriage equality as a majority against marriage equality. Rather than celebrate the 70 percent who support some sort of legal recognition for same-sex couples, they highlight the 54 percent who do not prefer marriage equality, advancing a narrative that the true end goal of the marriage equality movement does not have the momentum it’s been shown to have. One blogger has already taken this approach with this poll, and Fox News and other anti-equality outlets have pulled this rhetorical trick before, so there may be more to come.

    Politico also asked if respondents approve of President Obama’s performance on the issue of “gay marriage” — which notably is not the preferred rhetoric of the LGBT movement — and found that 48 percent approve, 42 percent disapprove, and 10 percent are unsure. Though the President supports marriage equality, this is question is still vague and essentially not very meaningful, but at least comes slightly closer to measuring what many other polls have found: that a clear majority of Americans consistently supports same-sex marriage.

    NEWS FLASH

    New Jersey Lawmaker Introduces Marriage Equality Referendum | New Jersey’s first openly gay legislator, Assemblyman Reed Gusciora (D), has introduced a bill that would allow New Jersey voters to approve marriage equality at the polls. Though he admits his reservations about voting on civil rights, he believes “the timing is right.” Gov. Chris Christie (R) would likely sign such a bill, because when he vetoed marriage equality earlier this year, he said that people should have the opportunity to vote on the issue. ThinkProgress has previously pointed out that a ballot fight would be incredibly costly and detrimental to the health of LGBT New Jerseyans. A lawsuit challenging the state’s civil unions law is still playing out in court, and the legislature could still override Christie’s veto, avoiding the costly burden of referendum campaign.

    Justice

    Justice Scalia Defends Comparing Homosexuality To Murder

    Justice Antonin Scalia

    Justice Antonin Scalia

    In a Princeton University speech Monday, Justice Antonin Scalia defended his opposition to LGBT equality and his previous comments equating homosexuality with murder and bestiality.

    When asked by openly gay Princeton freshman Duncan Hosie about his anti-LGBT comments, the senior Associate Justice on the high court stood by his logic as “reduction to the absurd.”

    The Associated Press reports:

    “It’s a form of argument that I thought you would have known, which is called the ‘reduction to the absurd,’” Scalia told Hosie of San Francisco during the question-and-answer period. “If we cannot have moral feelings against homosexuality, can we have it against murder? Can we have it against other things?

    Scalia said he is not equating sodomy with murder but drawing a parallel between the bans on both.

    Then he deadpanned: “I’m surprised you aren’t persuaded.”

    Scalia defended his extreme rhetoric, noting “I don’t think it’s necessary, but I think it’s effective,” and told the audience that legislatures have the right to ban that which they believe immoral. He also dismissed the importance of the Bill of Rights as an “afterthought,” compared to the U.S. Constitution’s overall structure, observing, “Every tinhorned dictator in the world has a bill of rights.”

    Scalia will be required to “faithfully and impartially” consider two same-sex marriage cases this term.

    The Morning Pride: December 11, 2012

    Welcome to The Morning Pride, ThinkProgress LGBT’s daily round-up of the latest in LGBT policy, politics, and some culture too! Here’s what we’re reading this morning, but please let us know what stories you’re following as well. Follow us all day on Twitter at @TPEquality.

    - Tennessee LGBT activists are advocating for President Obama to sign an executive order requiring nondiscrimination protections for federal contractors to compensate for the state’s ban on implementing such policies at the municipal level.

    - A coalition of 54 LGBT groups are calling on Obama to delay immigration proceedings on any bi-national same-sex couple until after the Supreme Court rules on the Defense of Marriage Act in June.

    - The American Family Association’s Bryan Fischer believes that if the Supreme Court overturns DOMA and Prop 8, “it will be the end of representative government in the United States.”

    - The National Organization for Marriage considered starting a “Dan Cathy Club” to rally behind the anti-gay preaching of the Chick-fil-A president and COO.

    - German conservatives have rejected a plan to provide equal tax benefits to same-sex couples in civil unions.

    - American Apparel will help the marriage equality fight in France by giving away 10,000 “Legalize Gay” shirts.

    - The UK will introduce marriage equality legislation next year.

    - Steve Czaban and Andy Pollin, ESPN Radio hosts in Washington, DC, engaged in a disgustingly offensive rant against trans college basketball player Gabrielle Ludwig, for which they only offered a 10-second “apology.” Listen to the rant:

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