Celebrating 41 Years! Issue 27 Volume 43
FRIDAY July 3, 2015 FREE!
25¢ in bookstores & newsstands
PRIDE PHOTOS by Nate Gowdy
SEC 3
Seattle Gay News SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
Gay bashings in Seattle Jim Obergefell lays a wreath at Gay Pioneers historic marker last weekend after to launch National LGBT 50th SCOTUS ruling by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor Every time the LGBTQ community advances our rights we face backlash; retribution for wanting the right to love and live in happiness and to finally not be a secondclass citizen. Members of our community are beaten, fired from their job, threatened and in some cases killed. In May of 2013, 32-year-old New Yorker Mark Carson was gunned down in the West Village. Another victim of hate. Carson was in a historically Gay neighborhood and just a few blocks from the Stonewall Inn. Carson’s tragic death was part of a troubling trend in New York at the time. Over the course of just two weeks, aside from Carson’s death, three hate crimes against Gay men occurred and earlier in May 2013, a Gay couple was attacked by disgruntled Knicks fans outside Madison Square Garden. According to NYPD, there had been 24 anti-Gay (hate) crimes in just the first four months of that year, compared to 14 in 2012. The rise in anti-Gay violence in New York came at a time when LGBTQ New
Yorkers were enjoying greater visibility and acceptance than they had at any point in the nation’s history. At that time, same-sex marriage was legal in 12 states and polls indicated that a majority of Americans supported equal marriage rights. “You can see in the mind of a mentally deranged person that the progress we’ve made around Gay rights recently is very threatening. That’s when these crimes tend to occur,” said political strategist and former Clinton administration adviser Richard Socarides, who suggested chilling possibilities for the months ahead in a May 2013 feature published by Salon.com. “This isn’t just confined to New York. If we see a Supreme Court ruling at the end of next month that we expect will be either favorable or very favorable and advance us closer to full equality for Gay people, we might see more of this.” Unfortunately, the case could be made that Socarides was right. SCOTUS ruled in favor that certain parts of DOMA were unconstitutional and President Obama
Anniversary Celebration
Jim Obergefell (l) with original picketers Paul Kuntzlers, Ada Bello and John James – courtesy of Cathy Renna
see gay bashings page 12
see obergefell page 22
Girl Scouts give back $100K Love wins! Marriage donation requiring discrimination Equality Rally at Federal against Trans girls; raise $309,865 Courthouse with Seattle in four days on Indiegogo in response Mayor Ed Murray by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor It’s hard to write about history when it is made. Words don’t seem to do justice to what it felt like on Friday when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled for marriage equality. And even though it has been one week since that momentous marker in the decades long fight for LGBTQ equality, I still have trouble saying exactly the right thing about it. And maybe that is it? Maybe the fact is this win was so big, so historical and so meaningful that none of us truly knows the impact this will ultimately have on the world. We do know, without a doubt, it is good though. Still, I had to come up with something to say. The mayor had asked me to speak. Seattle Mayor Ed Murray organized a rally at the federal courthouse in downtown Seattle the day the decision came down from SCOTUS. At 5 p.m. the courtyard in front of the court would be full of rainbow flagwaving people who, regardless of anything – sexual orientation, gender identity, gender
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer
expression – now had the right to marry the person they love and that marriage be recognized in every state of the Union. Because the Supremes ruled DOMA unconstitutional, America is now a more perfect Union and marriage means more than it ever has meant during any time of this nation’s existence. Love, truly has won. Local leaders in the fight to secure marriage equality in Washington state cheered the Supreme Court even though it will have a limited impact on Washington’s samesex couples because we’ve held the right to marriage since November 2012. Washington was one of the first states in history to approve a pro-LGBTQ marriage initiative by popular vote. On November 6, 2012 the streets of Capitol Hill became one giant celebration as people danced and sang and hugged and felt, for the first time ever, like a first class citizen when we had felt like second class citizens our whole lives just hours see love wins! page 22
The Girl Scouts of Western Washington have returned a donation of $100,000 because the donor asked that it not be used to benefit Transgender girls. The gift was substantial. The one donation alone represents almost 30% of the group’s annual $350,000 in donations. The organization said that the money would have been enough to help 500 girls who needed extra financial support to participate in GSA programs, but that their commitment to providing inclusive Scouting experiences was more important. “The donor asked us to return the donation unless we could guarantee that the money wouldn’t serve transgender girls,” the group said in their June 30 media release. “We said we couldn’t (and wouldn’t) guarantee such a thing because Girl Scouts is for EVERY girl. And we gave the money back.” To replace the donation and help pro-
vide financial assistance for additional girls, GSA of Western Washington has launched a crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo. “We’ve never done anything like this before, but we want to send a loud and clear message that our community is stronger BECAUSE we are inclusive,” the group said in its media release. “Girl Scouts empowers every girl, regardless of her gender identity, socioeconomic status, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, to make the world a better place. We won’t exclude any girl,” the fundraising pitch on the Indiegogo webpage says. “Every girl deserves access to a safe, friendly environment where she can stand up for what she believes in and be proud of who she is.” According to GSA, 4,000 donors have responded to date, with enough money to fund activities for 1,000 girls. Many donors also left comments recalling their own experiences as Girl Scouts. Jennifer Leonard, one of the donors, said the see girl scouts page 7