SGN June 24, 2011 - Section 1 - Pride

Page 1

Issue 25 Volume 39

Celebrating 38 Years!

Seattle Gay News

FRIDAY June 24, 2011 FREE! 25¢ in bookstores & news stands

SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

Our flag, part III

Legendary activist Cleve Jones visits Healeo threatened over Pride flag giveaway Seattle June 28th

Cleve Jones

by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer

Cleve Jones – creator of the NAMES Project AIDS Quilt and co-chair of the October 2009 National Equality March on Washington, D.C. – will be in Seattle for a community forum on Tuesday, June 28.

see jones page 27

by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor

courtesy healeo

Gil Goldstein

“Seattle is one of my favorite cities,” he told SGN. “Seattle was extremely supportive of the quilt. That means a lot to me.” Jones is now an organizer with UNITE HERE, the hotel and restaurant workers union, and will be the featured speaker at a community forum organized by UNITE HERE Local 8, Pride At Work, Allyship, Ingersoll Center, and Seattle Gay News. The event will be at Kaladi Brothers Café, 511 E. Pike St., at 4:30 p.m. UNITE HERE Local 8 represents 4,000 workers in Western Washington, and they are now negotiating new contracts at all their locations. Jones spoke with SGN by phone on June 22, between speaking en-

The owner of a mod retail space on Capitol Hill received threats last week because of his support for the LGBT community through an ongoing Pride flag giveaway at his store. Justin Brotman, founder and proprietor of the swanky vitamin and juice bar Healeo (1520 15th Ave.), received a hateful email on June 16 that shocked the businessman, a straight ally of the LGBT community. “I received the email last Thursday afternoon immediately after associating myself with a Seattle Out & Proud executive, Jarod Owen,” Brotman told Seattle Gay News. “I don’t feel the timing was coincidental as Jarod is a visible member of the LGBT community and works with an organization that is openly hated by anti-Gay Healeo on Capitol Hill

see threat page 26

New Approach Washington Gay activists’ files to legalize cannabis “glittering” tactic Powerful coalition supports decriminalization, launches initiative to the legislature

On June 22, a panel of diverse state leaders hosted a press conference at the Central Seattle Public Library to sponsor the legalization, taxation, and regulation of cannabis in the state of Washington. New Approach Washington, a newly formed political action committee, filed an initiative on Wednesday to authorize the Washington State

Liquor Control Board to produce and distribute marijuana to state residents 21 and over as it already does with hard liquor. The revenue generated would go into the state’s general fund, as well as local budgets. Among the proposal’s sponsors are Seattle City Attorney Pete Holmes, State Rep. Mary Lou Dickerson (D-36th District), Robert Wood, M.D., former director of the HIV/ AIDS Program of Public

associated press

file photo

by Rahul K. Gairola SGN Contributing Writer

Health of Seattle and King County, and Alison Holcomb, J.D., campaign director for the committee and drug policy director for the ACLU of Washington. Though recent headlines emphasized former U.S. Attorney John McKay’s support of the initiative, he was not present on the panel. Holmes inaugurated the public forum by asserting that although alcohol is legal and regulated by the state, its adverse effects on consumers are far worse than those of cannabis. Mark Johnson, 2008-9 Washington State Bar Association president, followed. “The process of drug mitigation has been an unprecedented disaster,” he said. Johnson noted that the estimated agricultural revenue of marijuana would potentially make it the second most profitable cash crop in the state after apples, generating one billion dollars a year for the state, and $35 billion for the nation. Wood contributed a medical evaluation, stating, “The Institute of Medicine … determined that, frankly, not much evidence

comes under fire

Newt Gingrich “glittered” at a Minneapolis book signing on May 17

by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor

“Glittering,” the act of dousing an anti-Gay GOP candidate in glitter, has come under fire as Gay activists debate whether or not the tactic should be called off. The glitterati have struck three different times. The first incident occurred on May 17, as Republisee cannAbis page 27 can presidential candidate Newt

proud to Be Different

We are conveniently located on-site at Lifelong AIDS Alliance below the Thrift Store.

Gingrich and his wife, Callista, were covered with glitter at a book signing in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Nick Espinosa, the activist behind the glitter stunt, yelled at the former House speaker, “Stop the hate. Stop the anti-Gay politics.” Espinosa was quickly whisked away by security. On June 16, the glitter brigade see glittering page 24

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