Archive | Homophobia

The effing show: Homo is where the heart is –

Posted on 04 April 2012 by ana_a

Background:
The effing show is one of three digital tv programs produced by Popfolio Sdn Bhd. Their charter is to engage with young Malaysians to help create a far more democratic media space. Rather than being reduced to mere consumers, we’d like to see young Malaysians create their own media experience. We do this by collaborating with creative producers to develop individual shows. PopTeeVee provides the resources to create and distribute this programming. This separation between platform and creativity will hopefully help create a more engaging media experience.

The episode:
Humorous opinion on the BN MP from Sekijang’s recent disertation claiming that 33% of Malaysian men are gay and wants to start rehabilitation centers for these men. Guess he thinks lesbians are ok, the perv!

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It Gets Better Video

Posted on 24 November 2010 by ana_a

Everyone deserves to be respected for who they are. I pledge to spread this message to my friends, family and neighbors. I’ll speak up against hate and intolerance whenever I see it, at school and at work. I’ll provide hope for lesbian, gay, bi, trans and other bullied teens by letting them know that “It Gets Better.”


That is the introductory paragraph that one is greeted by on the It Gets Better website. It is a pledge that all of us should take up and not only for the GLBT community but for those who are oppressed and discriminated against.

The most important step you should make, though, is to have self-respect.  You need to know that to accept yourself and love yourself as who you are and what you are is the first important big step to facing intolerance, bigotry or ignorance.  Overcoming other obstacles is easier when you know yourself worth.  People will know how real you are as a person regardless of your gender or sexual preference when you know this fact yourself.

I believe that is part of the message conveyed by our very own Gab  in her Its Get Better submission.

Please view and please be inspired to spread the message of love and tolerance.

Direct Link: Its Get Better by Yong Wei

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Ignorant Filmakers Sanctioned To Draw First Blood On Trans People.

Posted on 31 March 2010 by Yuki Choe

Cross-posted from Yuki’s Box Of Chocolates:

I do apologize for not writing much these days, as I have quite a number of things on my mind. However, something propped up last week in my-email that I feel needs to be addressed. Slightly reversing the decision by the Information, Communications and Culture Ministry last year that bans depictions of rempits and trans people (I still do not get the connection between violent motorcyclists and decent human beings with a medical condition), local filmmakers can now depict homosexuality and trans people IF the film ends with sad or tragic consequences to homosexual persons or trans people.

I am very thrilled that my acts of going to work, singing Karaoke with my friends, sleeping, watching movies and enjoying music are considered “immoral activities” by some quarters that I need to repent from. I am also sure that some of my friends would be excited that their loving relationships with their partners is considered nothing but a “culture” that may damage moral values of other people, and people need protection from some insane influence to turn heterosexuals to homosexuals (as if it is ever possible).

Not.

I absolutely do not get any relevance from movies that are based on nothing by idle speculation and lazy guessing into the life of a trans woman, like “…(Anu) dalam botol” for example. I would not even say poorly researched; it is pure fictional fantasy (I can imagine no research was done for “2Alam” either). I do not magically wish to “transform” into a woman to please anyone. If my partner is homosexual, he would find that gross because he wants a man, not a woman. I would not even regret getting the operation done if I have the chance, and if I do stumble upon a loving girl, then we would have a decent lesbian relationship, a kind of partnership that is recognized as the most low risk group for HIV/AIDS infection. By the way I do not even like sex. And I am not a “transvestite”.

So, this is plain misinformation, miscommunication and a counter-culture move to allow demonization of people like me. I have totally no regrets being who I am and am proud to be finally be living, not as who Raja Azmi Raja Sulaiman’s thinks I am or I should be. I shall die in pride that though my life is difficult thanks to ignorant and deceitful people like these so-called filmmakers, at least I live as the woman I truly am. These hate-mongering, rumour spreading and lie parroting heterosexists like “Dr” Rozmey may be getting the hype they want. But if any in the trans community of Malaysia commits suicide or are murdered due to the climate of prejudice, misunderstanding, intolerance and discrimination these “filmmakers” create, my sisters’ blood is surely on their hands.

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May 17: International Day Against Homophobia (IDAHO) 2009

Posted on 17 May 2009 by Gabrielle Chong Yong Wei

In conjunction, with the International Day Against Homophobia (IDAHO) 2009, TiltedWorld will sign the Internation Appeal to Reject Transphobia and Respect Gender Identity. You can contribute your voice against homophobia too,  by emailing your name or the name of your organization to contact@idahomophobia.org and you or your organization will be added to the list of signatories.

poster_homophobia2009_300px1

From the official websiteof IDAHO 2009:

Update (May 27):

Why an International Day against homophobia and transphobia ?

In 2008, sexual relations between persons of the same sex were punishable by death in 7 countries and considered to be some form of crime in more than 80 others. In most countries in the world, people from the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, transexual, intersex, queer, … community are being denied their fundamental human rights as defined, inter alia, by the Universal Declaration of Human Right, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.

The Day has been launched with the idea of creating a worldwide community of activists and committed people, sharing the ideal of a world without homophobia nor transphobia in which everyone can freely choose their own sex life and gender identity.

The origin

In 2005, Louis-Georges Tin, university professor, intellectual, and homosexual rights activist, took the initiative of launching a International Day against Homophobia and Transphobia, and founded the IDAHO Committee, an international association aiming at developing this initiative.

Since then, hundreds of associations in more than 50 countries have used the Day to bring about public and political mobilization for LGBT rights.

In addition to being adopted by associations and movements, the Day is now officially recognized by a growing number of countries, provinces, regions, cities, including :
Mexico
Costa Rica
The UK
France
Belgium
the Netherlands
Luxembourg

the European Parliament

And maybe soon Bolivia and surely many others to come

Why May 17 ?

May 17 was chosen because the date is the anniversary of the World Health Organization’s May 1990 decision to remove homosexuality from its list of mental disorders.

This victory of the lesbian-gay-bisexual and transgender (LGBT) cause was a historic step towards considering freedom of sexual orientation and gender identity as a fundamental basic human right.

Actions…

Countless activities are organized by associations all over the world. The IDAHO Committee itself also organizes seminars, events, and conferences every year.

In 2006, the IDAHO Committee launched a petition in favor of universal decriminalization. This petition was supported by many international associations, including ILGA (International Lesbian and Gay Association) and the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), and also by many famous people throughout the world : 5 Nobel Prize winners (including Peace Prize winner Desmond Tutu), 10 Pulitzer Prize winners (including Edward Albee and Tony Kushner), political leaders (such as Jacques Delors, former President of the European Commission, and Thomas Hammarberg, the Council of Europe Human Rights Commissioner), prominent intellectuals like Noam Chomsky and Judith Butler, and celebrities including Victoria Abril, Merryl Streep, Cyndi Lauper, David Bowie, Elton John, etc.

…And results

On the International Day against Homophobia and Transphobia 2005, the first public gay and lesbian demonstrations were held in China, Congo, and Bulgaria. These were historic events in each country concerned. In 2006, the IDAHO Committee co-organized the first Moscow Gay Pride.

Results of these activities are not, of course, always solely attributable to the IDAHO Committee or the World Day against Homophobia.
Nonetheless, our work makes a significant contribution to advances in LGBT rights by creating a unique moment when mobilization takes place all over the world, generating in its turn other forms of mobilization and showing policy makers the collective strength of the worldwide LGBT movement.

Organisation

The World Day against homophobia is facilitated by the IDAHO Committee, an international organization created to support, disseminate, and coordinate the Day at international level.

The IDAHO Committee is a confederal network. At national and regional levels, ad hoc coordination mechanisms have been set up to coordinate activities, disseminate information and spur people to action.

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Power-hungry homophobes, aiya choiii

Posted on 16 May 2009 by lainie

I’m sure a great many of you have heard of Singapore’s AWARE fiasco.For those who aren’t, this is why I’m posting this. Some things you should know, okay? THIS IS YOUR CRASH COURSE!

Basically, in April

1) a lot of antigay females of the same church (the homophobic Church of Our Savior) joined a feminist ngo, AWARE..

2) because they felt AWARE was too pro-gay. I wouldn’t say they had womens’ rights as their main concern.

3) They then voted their own people into the Executive Committee, and

4) fired AWARE’s staff and replaced them with fellow church members..

5) which is not the only crap they pulled (more on that later).

I mean, I’d heard of “working for change from within”, but this is “grab everything in your power-hungry fists, NOW”. I cringe just thinking of what damage they wreaked upon the work the feminists usually do with their one selfish power-grab.

You can grab some background from Donkeylicious: Can feminists take back Singapore’s AWARE from antigay church?

After this takeover, an AWARE EOGM (Extraordinary General Meeting) was called for, to take place during 2nd of May, 2009. The aim was to pass a vote of no confidence against the new AWARE leadership (am I the only one reminded of Perak right now?).

A few days before the EOGM was held, a friend of mine posted up this on her blog: Popagandhi: Possibly the most difficult post I have ever written.

Popagandhi is a Singaporean most known for not being in Singapore. She travels so much if there were an honorary degree for researching travel routes, it should go to her. This time around, she writes in response to the AWARE fiasco as, first and foremost, a Christian. You should totally read it.

By the way, yes, the new leadership was voted out in the EOGM. You can read an account and analysis from our dear friends over at Sayoni Speaks: AWARE EOGM, An account and commentary.

To cap it off, there’s an article from The Economist’s website, Singapore’s NGO furore.

Taken unawares

May 7th 2009 | SINGAPORE
From The Economist print edition

Liberals rally to take on the Christian right

A BLOODLESS coup instigated by a septuagenarian “feminist mentor”; a death threat sent to the new president’s husband by a self-proclaimed “jihadist sleeper”; a 3,000-person showdown. The tiny world of Singapore’s usually timid NGOs has never seen anything like it.

In late March a secretive group of conservative Chinese Christian ladies surreptitiously took over the executive council of AWARE (Association of Women for Action and Research), an advocacy group that has done much to promote women’s rights. Half of the new council attend the same church. They were jolted into action by AWARE’s alleged pro-gay agenda, particularly in sex-education courses taught at some schools. “Are we going to have an entire generation of lesbians?” bemoaned Thio Su Mien, their 71-year old matriarch.

Ms Thio’s disciples snatched control from a group of liberals who had served AWARE for years. The conservative new council and the liberal old guard traded barbs, exposing an ideological divide. Critics questioned the new lot’s shady tactics as well as their religious motives.

And so the old guard tabled a no-confidence motion, forcing an extraordinary general meeting. Ahead of it, politicians called for tolerance. And the new council’s pastor, Derek Hong, tried to mobilise support from the pulpit. Rebuked by leaders from a number of religions, he later apologised.

But the damage was done. At the meeting on May 2nd, the new council lost the vote and resigned. The question is why it staged the ill-fated raid in the first place. According to Alex Au, an online commentator, the Christian right will tend to use stealth to achieve its goals, because the discussion of religion is taboo in Singapore. They do not have well-established channels of discourse.

Yet the manner in which this conflict was resolved—through reasoned debate, without government intervention—is reason to cheer, says Braema Mathi, a former AWARE president. On May 7th, however, the government announced that AWARE’s programmes in schools did not conform in all respects to its guidelines and would be suspended.

Mr Au rejoices that the episode saw more people involve themselves in important issues. They are still, however, in a minority. In a survey, 70% of those polled said they did not care about what is going on at AWARE. But then, with Singapore’s trade-dependent economy facing its worst recession in history, most people have more prosaic worries.

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Don’t Ask Don’t Tell: What will Obama do?

Posted on 11 May 2009 by jiahuilee

From CBS News: http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/05/08/politics/politicalhotsheet/entry5001396.shtml

In spite of President Obama’s declared stance against the “don’t-ask-don’t-tell” policy that keeps openly gay individuals out of the military, the U.S. Army on Thursday told Lt. Dan Choi he is being dismissed for publicly revealing his homosexuality.

Choi is not the first servicemember to be dismissed because of his sexuality under the Obama administration, but his dismissal stands out because of his noted skills. Choi is an infantry platoon leader in the New York National Guard who is fluent in Arabic. He graduated West Point and recently returned from Iraq.

As founding member of Knights Out, an organization for openly gay, lesbisan, bisexual, and transgender West Point alumni and their supporters, Choi advocates allowing openly gay people to serve in the military. He announced his own sexuality on MSNBC on March 19.

On the campaign trail, Mr. Obama specifically criticized the dismissal of openly gay servicemen who have special language skills. He also told the Advocate, a gay newsmagazine, that the don’t-ask-don’t-tell policy is a “counterproductive strategy.”

“We’re spending large sums of money to kick highly qualified gays or lesbians out of our military, some of whom possess specialties like Arab-language capabilities that we desperately need,” he said in an interview with the magazine. “That doesn’t make us more safe.”

Since the don’t-ask-don’t-tell policy was implemented during the Clinton administration, around 12,500 servicemembers have been dismissed because of their sexuality. 

who-is-barack-obama 

What will Obama do?

The White House also recently came under fire from liberal bloggers who noted a change in the language addressing the issue on Whitehouse.gov. The site initially said Mr. Obama supported “repealing” don’t-ask-don’t-tell, but it later said the president supported “changing” the policy “in a sensible way.” After taking heat on the matter, the White House changed the wording on Whitehouse.gov once again to say the president “supports repealing Don’t Ask Don’t Tell in a sensible way that strengthens our armed forces and our national security.”

Defense Secretary Robert Gates has also been noncomittal about repealing the policy. While touring war colleges in April, Gates said he did not yet have a position on whether gay troops should be open about their sexuality.

Mr. Obama has also come under pressure from gay advocates to appoint an openly gay person to the Supreme Court.

Posted by Stephanie Condon, May 8, 2009 11:33 AM.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Lt. Choi has recently appeared again on Rachel Maddow’s show. He has just received his letter of termination from the military. The interview also highlighted a personal letter written to Sandy Tsao, a woman in the military who had just come out as gay and has also been informed that she will be withdrawn from the military. You can watch the You Tube video below:

In the first 100 days of Obama’s presidency, there has been mounting pressure for Obama to speak up on what he intends to do when it comes to issues pertaining to gay rights, the Don’t Ask Don’t Tell policy and same sex marriage. Maine, Iowa, and Vermont have recently sanctioned same sex marriage in the past few months. And pressure is building for the Federal Government to pass same sex marriage in the United States. There is also increasing pressure for Obama to repeal the Don’t Ask Don’t Tell policy in the military, which states that somebody can be fired from the military on the basis of homosexual conduct, which includes coming out publicly.

The CNN video below provides a great summary of the current situation here in the US.

1. DADT: Sandy Tsao and Dan Choi explains.

2. Same sex marriage: Can you hear us, Obama?

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Sweetest Taboo

Posted on 22 April 2009 by Paul

Just when I thought our television had turned over a new leaf.

I should have known of course that there’ll always be certain boundaries drawn, especially around supposedly sensitive issues such as homosexuality. Still, when they showed Brothers and Sisters on our cable tv more than a year back, I found myself pleasantly surprised. Whoa. A regularly recurring main character who happens to be gay on our national tv? Hell, that’s progress if anything.

Maybe our idiotic censors can change.

Still when week after week they continued showing our gay protagonist Kevin Walker’s brief dalliances with his coterie of male admirers ( at least before he settled down with Scotty ), I found myself almost applauding the seemingly enlightened censorship board.

303_kevin_scotty_cuddle_couch
Scotty : Awww, Look, our proposal scene is coming on!
Kevin : Where? Bloody hell. Did they just erase it?

Of course – as usual – I spoke a lil too soon in praise of the scissor-happy censors. Since I guessed that tonight would be the infamous proposal scene that Kevin makes to his partner Scotty, I figured I might as well take a look. As a measure of support if nothing else. But just right at the end before the gay proposal, the episode came to an abrupt end with a clever segue nto a preview of the coming week’s delights.

Yup.  Our diligent censors had been busy at work. Helpful lil buggers. Obviously talk of gay marriage turned out to far too much for them. Two men committing to each other must have blown their little minds. Shouldn’t have expected much from folks who’d censor the word ‘gay’ from the Oscars.

So for all my fellow countrymen – at least those who aren’t as blindly bigoted as our homophobic censors – just take a look at what actually happened at the end of the episode.

Makes me wonder how they’re gonna play out the episode next week which centers on Kevin and Scotty’s marriage. Will the overeager scissor-happy censors slice and dice again? Tune in next week.

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WE NEED YOUR SUPPORT AND SIGNATURES…

Posted on 30 March 2009 by pagarmerah

a dear friend forwarded this to me and asked me if i could help out.

please sign the petition/letter and email it back to mockmeat@gmail.com or thilaga.sulathireh@gmail.com. please email the letter before April 20th, 2009.

please include your name, country, organization (if any).

thank you.

—————–

Lesbo-homo-transphobic police – Complicit justice

April 27, 2009: The trial of the Queeruption 8, Karcelona

During the first week of June 2005, “Queeruption 8, Karcelona” took place near Barcelona. The event was a self-organized international gathering of radical queers. During the gathering different activities took place both inside and outside of the spaces that had been prepared for the event. One of the many initiatives took the form of a playful, festive, and revindicative demonstration through the commercial gay zone of Barcelona, the Gayxample, and was meant as a critique of the bars, clubs, and businesses which are geared towards the gay public and which play an important role in the creation of the stereotype of what it is to be gay, the ghettoizing and marketing of our sexualities, and pink capitalism. At the same time, the demonstration also had the goal of inviting people to festively “occupy” public space and above all to make visible the existence of other spaces which lie outside of the circuit of commercial exchange – spaces where we can escape from heteronormativity and homo-lesbo-transphobia.

During the course of the this colorful demonstration, explanatory pamphlets were handed out, different slogans were cheered, a lot of noise was made and some people even decorated the walls with their thoughts. But there were also moments of poor communication which caused misunderstandings between some of the clients of the commercial establishments and some of the participants in the demonstration. As part of our fight against lesbo-trans-homophobia, we would have liked to avoid the negative feelings which some people experienced. There were also moments of confusion and tension between some of the demonstrators and the business owners or managers of one of the establishments which ended with a broken flowerpot and damages in the reception lounge of the gay luxury hotel, the Axel.

After the demo had ended, leaving some of the demonstrators in Plaza Universidad, men appeared who, without identifying themselves as agents of the national police, began to attack and brutally arrest the people that they encountered there. People who witnessed how their friends were attacked and thrown to the ground approached with the intention of stopping the attacks but were then also arrested. In the end nine completely arbitrary arrests took place.

The detainees were continuously humiliated. Once at the police station, they were brought one by one to a room where they were forced to undress. The police insulted them, using various homophobic phrases such as, “Faggot, I’m gonna stick my nightstick up your ass,” “You’re worthless as a man. You don’t count for shit, faggot,” “Girl, you’re rougher than a piece of sandpaper.” While this was going on, the rest of the detainees were handcuffed to a bench in the adjoining room where they could easily hear the screams of their peers who were with the police.

Physical aggressions took place, for example, “…[the policeman] hit one detainee in the head so hard with his fist that the person’s head bounced against the head of another detainee and after that he kicked the same detainee in the chest, producing a nervous shock which included tremors and loss of breath. We asked for a doctor but the police laughed at us without even giving the injured detainee a glass of water…” (extract from the testimony of one of the detainees).

Some of the detainees were neither Spanish nor Catalan speakers and yet the police denied them access to translators who would have made it easier for them to understand what was happening.

Two days later, after appearing before a judge, the detainees were granted provisional release awaiting trial. Their charges include bodily harm, public disorder, property damage, and resisting authority. The district attorney is asking for 2 ½ years of prison and 11,400 euros in fines for one detainee and 1 ½ years of prison and between 5,700 and 11,000 euros in fines for the others. There is no evidence which links the detainees to the actions of which they are accused, especially as the arrests were made completely arbitrarily, a fact which is demonstrated by the arrest of one woman who was only passing through Plaza Universidad.

Five of the nine detainees made official accusations against the National Police for torture, mistreatment, and trans-lesbo-homophobia suffered at the police station. These accusations were filed away by a local judge two times in a row before being sent to a higher court, the Audiencia Provincial, which ordered an investigation into the events. But on the date when the accused officers were meant to testify before a judge, said officers did not appear in court and the accusations were once again filed away. This fact was cited and denounced by Amnesty International in their 2007 report entitled, Spain: Adding insult to injury: The effective impunity of police officers in cases of torture and other ill-treatment (pages 49-52). http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/EUR41/006/2007/en

And now, after the police have emerged yet again unpunished for the abuse and torture which they commited, right at this very moment we are awaiting the trial of the nine detainees which will take place on April 27 and which, in the worst case scenario, will result in jail time and 80,000 euros worth of fines for these nine people.

Given the gravity of these events, WE DEMAND:

-The ABSOLUTION of all of the detainees.

AND WE DENOUNCE:

-The impunity with which the police act and lie

-The abuse, torture, aggessions, and homo-trans-lesbphobic humiliations which our comrades received at the hands of the police.

We encourage everyone to come to the concentration in front of the courthouse on April 27, 2009.

Please keep yourselves informed regarding the latest updates.

asambleaqueerbcn@no-log.org

————————

THE LETTER (please copy the letter and paste it in your email)

ILUSTRÍSIMA SEÑORA JUEZ MAGISTRADA DEL JUZGADO DE LO PENAL NUM 3

Por medio de la presente, las entidades abajo firmantes, deseamos expresar nuestra preocupación por el proceso penal al que se enfrentan Kareem Ghoniem, Idoia Millan Diaz, Sergio Cordon Delgado, Javier Segura Navarro, Antonio Tarrasa Chillon, Lene Myging Nielsen, Gerard Francis Sullivan y Maria Silvenson. Estas personas fueron detenidas el día tres de junio del año 2005 en la Plaza Universidad de Barcelona, después de una manifestación por la visibilización de su identidad sexual. Ahora estas personas, que participan en la lucha contra la discriminación por razones de orientación sexual, se enfrentan a un juicio penal, mientras que las múltiples denuncias efectuadas en su momento
por malos tratos, torturas y vejaciones homotranslesbofóbicas a las que fueron sometidas por parte del cuerpo de Policía Nacional a lo largo de la detención, han quedado archivadas sin que en ningún momento, por parte de los poderes públicos, se interesasen en el esclarecimiento de las mismas.
(English translation)
Esteemed Magistrate Judge of Penal Court Number 3,
By means of this document, we, the entities whose signatures appear below, would like to express our concern in respect to the penal process which is facing Kareem Ghoniem, Idoia Millan Diaz, Sergio Cordon Delgado, Javier Segura Navarro, Antonio Tarrasa Chillon, Lene Myging Nielsen, Gerard Francis Sullivan and Maria Silvenson . These persons were arrested on the 3rd of June, 2005, in Plaza Universidad, Barcelona, after a demonstration for the visibility of their sexual identity. Now these same persons, who participate in the fight against discrimination based on sexual orientation, find themselves facing a criminal trial whilst the multiple accusations lodged by them against the abuse, torture, and homo-trans-lesbophobic insults which they were subjected to at the hands of the National Police during
their detention have remained filed away without public authorities having taken any interest in their aclaration.
Name:
Country:
Organization:
Signature:

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Anti-Crime NGO Condemns Gay and Lesbian Movies

Posted on 26 March 2009 by Gabrielle Chong Yong Wei

One of my friends was recently mugged while walking home after gym. He was whacked with a motorcycle lock by four boys on two motorbikes, had a finger severed and sustained a skull fracture.

In the midst of soaring crime rates in Malaysia, guess what’s worrying “anti-crime NGOs” such as the Malaysian Crime Prevention Foundation? The ‘lack’ of efforts to promote discrimination and bigotry, perhaps…hmm?

From sex-obsessed Malay tabloid Kosmo!:

NGO bimbang dengan filem gay dan lesbian

KUALA LUMPUR – Pertubuhan bukan kerajaan (NGO) melahirkan kebimbangan dengan bertambahnya penerbitan filem dan drama Malaysia yang menjurus kepada kehidupan gay atau lesbian.

Menurut mereka, karya seni seperti itu tidak mampu mendidik masyarakat mengenai keburukan budaya songsang golongan berkenaan, malah ia dikhuatiri mempengaruhi generasi remaja di negara ini.

Pengerusi Jawatankuasa Capaian Belia Yayasan Pencegahan Jenayah, Ahmad Kamal Affandi berkata, terdapat lebih banyak kesan negatif melalui filem-filem itu berbanding kesan positif.

“Biasanya penerbit dan pengarah hanya berselindung di sebalik niat sebenar mereka menerbitkan filem bercorak gay dan lesbian ini.

“Kononnya mahu memberi tauladan… bagaimanapun itu hanya alasan. Mereka sebenarnya mahu mencari untung daripada filem seperti ini.

“Saya bukan seorang pengkarya filem atau drama tetapi melihatkan filem begini, kisah tauladan yang ditunjukkan hanya sedikit untuk mencantikkan perjalanan cerita,” katanya.

Ahmad Kamal menambah, mungkin pengkarya di negara ini sudah kekeringan idea untuk menghasilkan filem lebih berkualiti dan bermanfaat.

Kisah mengenai golongan gay dan lesbian dipaparkan dalam karya beberapa penerbit filem dan drama seperti Comolot arahan Mohd. Ikram Ismail, Histeria (James Lee), Anu Dalam Botol (Raja Azmi Raja Sulaiman) dan Mabuk Astrogen (Sheila Rusly).

Penerbit pertahan karya songsang 

KUALA LUMPUR – Penerbit filem dan drama yang berunsurkan gay dan lesbian menyeru pertubuhan bukan kerajaan (NGO) supaya menyokong perjuangan yang tersirat dalam karya-karya mereka.

Penerbit filem Anu Dalam Botol, Raja Azmi Raja Sulaiman berkata, tujuan utama mereka mengangkat tema sedemikian kerana mahu masalah itu ditangani.

“Gejala gay dan lesbian sedang berleluasa, mereka (NGO) kena bantu kaji dan bukan pejam mata saja,’’ ujarnya ketika dihubungi di sini semalam.

Menurut Raja Azmi, disebabkan sikap tidak ambil peduli itu, gejala tersebut telah berkembang dalam diam.

“Saya bukan bodoh mahu menampilkan adegan yang kemudian tidak diluluskan dan dipotong oleh Lembaga Penapisan Filem (LPF), tetapi ia cuma digambarkan menerusi seni. Masih ada batasan dalam kami berkarya,’’ jelasnya.

Bagi penerbit telefilem Mabuk Estrogen yang juga memaparkan tema cinta songsang, Sheila Rusly, masanya sudah tiba untuk masyarakat berfikir mengenai masalah gay dan lesbian.

“Sampai bila kita mahu ia menjadi isu yang terbiar begitu sahaja. Jika tidak lama-kelamaan masyarakat kita menjadi semakin parah angkara tidak memahami apa yang berlaku,’’ ujarnya.

 comolotposterhs4

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The Question of Homosexuality: The Story and Science of Sexual Preference

Posted on 22 March 2009 by Alex

Reposted from Tufts Observer.

By Seth Stein

When does a man become straight or gay? Is it a choice or is it predetermined? If it is a choice, as certain groups claim, then the issue is further complicated: why would a person willingly join an oppressed minority? Perhaps the discussion should start on a more personal, albeit admittedly non-scientific, note.

I grew up in downtown Chicago. One of my best friends grew up about four blocks away from me. We come from similar socioeconomic strata; both of our parents are professionals. He has an older sister; I have an older half-brother and half-sister. We attended the same day camp as children and the same high school as adolescents. We both attend prestigious top-tier universities now. Yet he recently came out as a gay man and is very active in the LGBT community at his school, while I’m a heterosexual with a girlfriend. What “makes” him gay and me straight?

Before examining what in his life led him to be gay, it is important to understand what a gay man is. Homosexual behavior, as in same-sex sexual parings, is as old as the human species. The Greeks, the Romans, and Samurai all practiced pederasty; various other kinds of homosexual behavior have been the norm in societies across the globe. But a gay man—a man who has exclusively same-sex relations with romantic attachments—is a modern phenomenon. The Greek who has a boy lover that he trains to be a warrior, but also has his wife to maintain the home, is not a homosexual. A man who self-identifies as gay, has strong attraction for same-sex relations, and chooses not to adhere to the norms of straight society, certainly is a homosexual.

 

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The Gay Community

To understand homosexual behavior, not identity, we can use the animal world as a guide. Homosexual behavior is commonplace among other primates. The most popular theory used to describe this behavior is called the “alliance formation hypothesis.” Simply put, homosexual behavior allows lower-ranking males to cement alliances with higher-ranked males or other lower-ranked males; this allows them access to resources they either would not have had before or would have had limited access too. The main resource, ironically enough, is access to females. Homosexual behavior, just like heterosexual behavior, is used to cement social bonds. In this light, the ancient Greeks and Romans aren’t outliers—they are the norm.

But where did the modern gay community come from? Around the 19th century there were fundamental changes taking place in Western Europe that would transform the face of the world—industrialization, nationalism, and the modern nation-state. It should not be surprising that the first homosexual community—who looked to men exclusively for romantic and sexual relations—emerged in the most advanced state of the time, Great Britain. Freed from traditional family arrangements and social constraints, as well as the ability to lead independent lives with relative autonomy and anonymity, they embraced their sexual desires towards members of the same sex.

The division of the world into gay and straight quickly followed the creation of the first gay communities. Up until the early 18th century, it was not uncommon for married Englishmen to engage in homosexual intercourse on occasion. However, the burgeoning field of biological science quickly ended the fluid sexuality that had been the norm in Western civilization from ancient times. Rapid advances in medicine spurred doctors to classify homosexuality as a deviant behavior and therefore an illness or defect. This was instrumental in further separating those who chose to engage in homosexual behavior and those who did not. People now began to self-identify as either gay or straight.

The tendency for both the homosexual and the heterosexual worlds to practice exclusively same-or opposite-sex relations caused gay men to develop an alternative community to the predominantly heterosexual world. Before the community came out of the closet in the 1960s, it was maintained by secretive bars and meeting places. There were clearly established ways of suggesting to possible partners that a man was gay. This is where the stereotype of the effeminate gay man originates; gay men would commonly act more effeminate to signal to other men that they were gay.

As studies of human sexuality in the United States were almost nonexistent before the 1960’s, little was known about this underground community. Alfred Kinsey, in his famous report on human sexuality, opened the doors to this world and may have laid the basis for the gay civil rights movement. He challenged the common misconception that one is either gay or straight, positing that human sexuality exists on a continuum, and, throughout their lives, people can and will engage in both homosexual and heterosexual behavior. That being said, Kinsey did allow that most men engaged in predominantly opposite-or same-sex relations, not a combination of the two.

This caused a sea of changes in the homosexual world. Kinsey allowed that homosexual behavior was not deviant but in fact perfectly normal. As the community came out of the closet in the 1960’s, fundamental cultural changes took place that allowed gay men to express themselves in new ways. Being gay changed from being a dark secret to being alternative; gay scientists and activists sought to end the discrimination they experienced from mainstream society.

At this point the gay community shifted from an underground, largely self-contained community into a political unit. As black Americans demanded that they not be discriminated against on the basis of their genetic skin color, so gay men demanded that they not be discriminated against on the basis of their sexual orientation. Scientists sought to find the “cause” for homosexuality–if orientation was indeed genetic or biological, then it was senseless to discriminate on that basis. However, more conservative scientists and religious groups sought to prove that homosexuality was a choice and therefore not protected by civil rights legislation. And thus inquiry into the biological basis of homosexuality took on politically charged tones that skewed our understanding of homosexuality for decades.

Nature vs. Nurture

Fortunately, our understanding of homosexuality and human sexuality in general has advanced by leaps and bounds; homosexuality is no longer listed in the DSM-IV as a mental illness. The most extensive twin study on sexual orientation ever undertaken was recently published in Sweden. Comparing twins, the study demonstrated that human homosexuality has a genetic factor, an environmental factor, and a social factor. All of these factors play together to increase or decrease the probability that an individual will be a homosexual. The results of the study suggest that environmental factors account for about 60% of sexual orientation, while genes account for another 40% (refer to the sidebar for an analysis of this study).

The genetic basis of homosexuality is a puzzle to biologists—why would a trait that causes a person not to have offspring be preserved in the human species? This puzzle, however, is misleading; although homosexuals currently leave around 1/5th the offspring of their heterosexual counterparts, historically we have no evidence of how many offspring homosexuals could have produced as they were most likely not exclusively homosexual. The genes that contribute to male homosexuality have been postulated to be located on X chromosome and therefore passed down the mother’s line. In a tip of the hat to the elegance of evolution, one theory suggests these genes seem to make women more fertile while also contributing to male homosexuality. As such, the dearth of offspring produced by gay males is offset by greater numbers of offspring produced by women carrying the gene.

As previously stated, genetic factors are not the only determinant of homosexuality, and modern science shows they may have an even smaller effect than we think. Current theory is exploring unique environmental factors, i.e. the state of the fetus in the mother’s womb. The biggest determinant for homosexuality seems to be birth order; the successive sons after the first of a woman are the most likely to be gay. Why this is the case is still not clear, but it may have something to do with hormone levels in the womb. Testosterone plays a major role in sexual development in fetuses, and it is theorized that the first son, who produces testosterone in the mother’s womb, causes the mother’s body to become sensitized to the molecule. The mother will start producing testosterone antibodies that could change the hormone balance of her successive sons, which may increase the likelihood that he is a homosexual.

Regardless of the cause of homosexuality, there are some biological differences between a gay and straight person’s brain. Recent studies, which are considered controversial by some, show that gay men’s brains more closely resemble the brains of straight women. In other words, gay men have stronger vocalization skills and lower visuospatial intelligence than straight men. These differences are not drastic or universal, but they do shed light on a biological component of male homosexuality.

It is apparent that homosexuality has a biological basis, but few of the factors that contribute to homosexuality seem to predetermine it; in other words many different factors work together to make homosexuality more likely. Social factors are important as well. The process of “coming out” is actually a very ordered and regular socialization process, in which an individual chooses to self-identify as a gay man and pursue their sexual desires toward the same sex. This is part of the polarization of male sexuality—men who come out to be gay identify as strongly with exclusive homosexuality as your average straight man identifies with exclusive heterosexuality.

What is clear is that homosexuality certainly has its biological, social, and cultural elements. A fascinating confluence of these factors is the “gay ghetto.” Being a Chicagoan, this concept is hardly foreign to me. Northalsted, commonly known as “Boy’s Town” is an accepted part of the Chicago landscape, geographically positioned near other primarily young and progressive neighborhoods. In Boy’s Town shops fly the rainbow flag, men at bars expect other men to be gay and gay political organizations are organized from the community. Because of its tight-knit community spirit, Boy’s Town was one of the few urban neighborhoods to grow and gentrify throughout the entirety of the last four decades, even during the height of urban decline and white flight. As urban renewal became the order of the day in the last decade or so, Boy’s Town has been an essential mover in revitalizing Chicago’s north side.

Conclusion

What do all these facts mean when we look at them together? Gay men are actually different from straight men, both biologically and socially. So is that what makes my friend different from me?

The short answer is no. My friend and I are actually the same in every way that matters. He wants to find someone who he can love and who can love him back. He wants to be with someone he is attracted to who can offer new things in his life. He wants to be happy and satisfied. At the same time, his sexual orientation is not important at all in other large areas of his life—what he studies, what he likes to do, and who he chooses as his friends. I do not consider it too high a compliment to describe him as one of my most cherished friends—a role he filled even before he came out of the closet.

But why then is this the kind of person we are allowed to demonize in such horrible ways? Our cultural bias against homosexuals is so strong that the groups opposed to marriage in California didn’t even try to cover their motives. Instead they explicitly said they were anti-gay rights.

Fortunately times are changing much faster than the conservative forces in society can contain them. Americans our age are much more likely than even our parents, who were hippies, to be accepting of gay and lesbian individuals. Even young evangelicals are sick of beating the sodomy drum and would much rather focus on traditional progressive causes like poverty alleviation. I honestly believe that by the time I am my parents’ age my friend will be able to get married legally.

Even though things are changing quickly, that is not a license for inaction. While I enjoy the full range of rights and opportunities any society can provide, my friend does not. He is a second-class citizen. Gay rights is the civil rights issue of our generation. Liberty by gradations is not liberty, it is hierarchy. True liberty is all or nothing, and, until all people in the United States enjoy and practice their full rights, we will not be a free people—just mostly free.

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