ISSUE 4 6
C E L E B R AT I N G
VOLUME 49
47 YEARS
F R I D AY
IN
NOV EMBER 12 , 2 0 21
PRINT S E AT T L E ’ S L G B T Q I A + N E W S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T W E E K LY S I N C E 19 74
TALK SHOW HOST: ANTI-VAXXERS TREATED WORSE THAN AIDS PATIENTS
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer Right-wing radio talk show host Dennis Prager stirred up a storm of controversy with his November 8 claim that people refusing a COVID-19 vaccine are treated worse than AIDS patients at the height of the epidemic. Dennis Prager – Photo by Gage Skidmore
see PRAGER page 19
Violent murders of Transgender people set to reach an all-time high Photo by Sumy Sadruni / AFP
by Hannah Saunders SGN Contributing Writer In 2020 the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) recorded 44 known deaths of Transgender and gender-nonconforming people — which was greater than any year since the HRC first began tracking these rates in 2013 — but this year might break that record. With two months left in the year, violent murders of Transgender people are expected to reach an all-time high.
The most recently reported HRC murder of a Transgender person was 39-yearold Rikkey Outumuro, who was shot in Centralia this past October. Outumuro is at least the 44th known violent killing of a Transgender or gender-nonconforming person in 2021. She is the fifth known case from the Pacific Northwest this year: Ollie Taylor, Zoey Martinez, Jo Acker, and Jessi Hart also lost their lives.
see TRANS MURDERS page 20
International tribunal finds US guilty of genocide Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center – Photo courtesy of WikiWhat
by Lindsey Anderson SGN contributing writer On October 22 and 23, a distinguished panel of nine international jurists met to discuss allegations of genocide, among other international human rights abuses, brought against the United States. The extent to which the United States’ history of oppression has led to modern inequality has remained a topic of debate among pol-
iticians, activists, and the average citizen, but after presenting their findings, a skilled team of 30 lawyers and law students hoped to reach a conclusion on the world stage. The panel convened at the historic Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center in New York City. The location chosen was significant, as it was the location of Malcolm X’s assassination in
see TRIBUNAL page 21