Celebrating 41 Years! Issue 39 Volume 43
SEC 2 PG 1
Seattle Gay News
FRIDAY September 25, 2015 FREE!
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SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
Sleazeball pharmaceutical exec hikes price of AIDS drug 5,500% “We needed to turn a profit” he says
Pope survives White House reception with Gay bishop, radical nun, and Trans activists
Brings up controversial Catholics in address to Congress
Turning Pharmaceuticals CEO Martin Shkreli – Universal News & Sports (Europe)
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer
Daraprim, the trade name for pyrimethamine, is used to combat protozoal infecPope Francis addresses Congress September 23, 2015 – Win McNamee / Getty Images tions usually transmitted through food. The price of an important AIDS drug Most people can easily fight off the infec- by Mike Andrew ficials, Pope Francis made the best of a will rise 5,500%, from $13.50 to $750 per tions even without medications, but for SGN Staff Writer September 23 White House reception that dose, the drug’s manufacturer announced people whose immune systems are comproincluded on the guest list a Gay bishop, a September 20. Despite the displeasure of Vatican ofsee daraprim page 12 see pope francis page 6
New campaign launched to A new study reveals how make Stonewall the nation’s Gay men see themselves first park site dedicated to the LGBTQ community
New study reveals Gay men’s perspective – www.jonathonaslay.com Stonewall Inn – Johannes Jordan / cbsnews.com
by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor On September 20, in front of the iconic Stonewall Inn, U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, U.S. Congressman Jerrold Nadler, the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA), the Human Rights Campaign,
state and local elected officials, advocacy groups and community leaders launched a new campaign to designate the nation’s first national park site dedicated to LGBT history at Stonewall. The national campaign launch has been organized outside of the historic Stonewall Inn and Christopher Park, in New York see stonewall inn page 11
by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor The LGBTQ community is rarely surveyed on a national level. And when we are, it is almost always about personal safety, bullying, or some other terrible thing. While that information is vital and needed, the truth is, when do we ever get to just talk to each other to find out how we think, why we think it, and acknowledge that while we are
LGBTQ, it is okay to see something from a Gay perspective if you are a Gay man – and not be made to feel like you are a bigot because of it. Recently, Logo (Viacom Media network aimed at LGBTQ audiences) polled 1,061 Gay men between ages 18 and 49, asking them how they saw themselves and their communities and following up with smaller groups in a number of cities. The survey is see survey page 12