Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Allies are needed (House Oversight Committee)

My grandson Jayson is gay.  Even if he was not gay, I would still care about gay people and the LGBTQ+ community.  Today, U.S. House Representative Carolyn Maloney chaired a hearing of the House Oversight and Reform Committee addressing the violence aimed against LGBTQ+ people. 

It was an important hearing and I thank her for that.

I felt all the Democrats did a good job.  I did not feel that about the Republican members.  If you have read my site for long, you know I am not afraid to call out Democrats.  (And I will be again calling out U.S. President Joe Biden before I am done with this post.)

I found the Republicans to be decidedly behind the times with remarks that would not have cut it in the 1970s.  

I especially appreciated the remarks by U.S. House Representatives Rashida Tlaib and Robin Kelly about being allies and the importance of being allies.  

We have to increase our strength as allies.  I have lived through many decades of prejudice against LGBTQ+ people but not like this.  The hate speech alone is shocking.  When Anita Bryant was going around spewing hate in the 70s, we were openly mocking her and calling her out -- allies were.  Of course, LGBTQ+ members led on it but allies were part of calling her out as well.  I am just not seeing that partnership as much currently.  

I see a lot of so-called lefties muttering "identity politics" and remaining silent.

Is there a reason that, for example, Krystal and Saagar and BREAKING POINTS cannot cover these issues?

There is way too much silence today.  It is hard to believe that we were better allies in the 70s than we are today.

Again, Ms. Tlaib and Ms. Kelly deserve praise for being committed allies.  

I really wish I had seen even one Republican member expressing anything that made me think they might be an ally -- or even just be an ally someday in the near future.  

Nothing. 
 
There is an interesting development in the Biden scandals.  Mattathias Schwartz (BUSINESS INSIDER) reports:


The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is quietly preparing to release hundreds of pages of internal Obama White House records that could contain information about Hunter Biden's relationship with Ukrainian energy company Burisma, Insider has learned — and the Biden Administration, which could put a stop to it by invoking executive privilege, is refusing to say whether it will allow the release to go forward.

The records, which include almost 300 full or partial emails that mention Burisma, date back to 2014, when Joe Biden was serving as vice president in the Obama Administration. According to a letter that the archives sent to the Biden White House and the Obama Foundation in November, NARA is proposing to release the records in response to a Freedom of Information Act request for emails that contain the word "Burisma."

The letter doesn't describe the emails, but says that "several" of them are press inquiries after the 2014 announcement that Hunter Biden had joined the company's board, earning as much as $83,333 a month despite having no experience in the energy sector. The letter also says NARA will withhold 22 emails, without specifying why. The Freedom of Information Act offers exemptions for draft documents and comments that are "part of the deliberative or policy-making process." Documents that could violate someone's privacy or expose trade secrets are also potentially exempt. 


 

This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot' for today:

Wednesday, December 14, 2022.  In the Kurdistan some women are setting themselves on fire, in the US Joe Biden takes part in history (even if the White House staff bungles it) and much more.





Yesterday, US President Joe Biden signed The Respect for Marriage Act into law.  The White House issued the following statement:

On Tuesday, December 13, 2022, the President signed into law:

H.R. 8404, the “Respect for Marriage Act,” which establishes statutory authority for same-sex and interracial marriages and repeals provisions of law that once prevented any State or territory from being required to give effect to a same-sex marriage from another State or territory.

Thank you to Speaker Pelosi, Representatives Nadler, Cicilline, and Davids, Leader Schumer, Senators Baldwin, Collins, Portman, Sinema, Tillis, Feinstein, and Booker, and many others for their leadership.


Leave it to the White House to mess that up.  This was a time to quote Joe.

A few outlets do, for a minute or two, they say Joe declared, "For most of our nation’s history, we denied interracial couples and same sex couples from these protections. We failed to treat them with equal dignity and respect. And now, law requires that interracial marriage and same sex marriage must be recognized as legal in every state in the nation."  That's really not an accurate quote but NPR and others are running with it.  What he said should have been in the statement that the White House released.

Was the communications team too busy chatting with a celebrity (one who, Marcia noted, wanted to thank people for the passage of the act but couldn't think of one gay person to thank)?  This is embarrassing, the White House needs to get its act together.  Yes, it's very good that the spokesperson had a talking to by legal and, yes, she stuck to her lane yesterday (even noting the Hatch Act all by herself).  But this was a historic moment and Joe's remarks needed to be noted.  The White House staff failed him. 

This was going to be the snapshot where we could just note some good work done by Joe.  Instead, we have to note that the tiny statement above, in bold, issued by the White House (a) isn't enough and (b) is so poorly written that when it appears to be a quote (after the colon in bold), it's not really a quote.  They bungled everything.

Joe has his problems and issues and we note them frequently here.  But this was Joe's moment to shine -- and he did -- and he's let down by the people working at the White House.  How very sad.




Let's note some of what Joe said:


Hello, hello, hello.  Today's a good day.  A day America takes a final step towards equality, towards liberty and justice -- not just for some but for everyone. Everyone.  Toward creating a nation where decency, dignity and love are recognized, honored and protected.  Today, I sign The Respect for Marriage Act into law.  Deciding whether to marry, who to marry is one of the most profound decisions a person can make.  And as I've said before -- and some of you might remember on a certain TV show ten years ago [NBC's MEET THE PRESS] -- I got in trouble -- marriage, I mean this with all my heart, marriage is a simple proposition -- who do you love and will you be loyal to that person you love.  It's not more complicated than that.  And the law recognizes that everyone should have the right to answer those questions for themselves without the government interference.  It also secures the federal rights, protections, that come with marriage -- like when you're loved one gets sick and you're legally recognized as the next of kin.  For most of our nation's history, we denied interracial couples and same sex couples from these protections. We failed -- we failed to treat them with an equal dignity and respect. And now, the law requires interracial marriage and same sex marriage must be recognized as legal in every state in the nation.  I want to thank all of you for being here today, for being part of this important movement.  

 



MONTANARO: Our latest NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll, which is going to be released Thursday, shows 68% are in favor of same-sex marriage. You know, it was still a bit of a surprise. I have to say, though, that the bill got through because it wasn't clear they could get the 60 votes to overcome a filibuster because Republicans really have been much slower to embrace same-sex marriage. But a dozen Republican senators voted for it, 39 Republicans in the House did, too. And it's really reflective of how the country, even Republicans, are changing, even though GOP support, you know, has been much less in our surveys, less than a majority.

SHAPIRO: All right. We've been describing this as now a law that protects same-sex and interracial marriage. Beyond that top line, explain exactly what it does and does not do.

MONTANARO: Yeah. Not everyone's celebrating this as the be all, end all - and it's not. You know, this was largely passed because of the threat that the conservative supermajority at the Supreme Court after the Dobbs ruling that took away the right to an abortion, you know, could overturn other rights, including same-sex marriage. You know, while this bill gives federal benefits to same-sex couples, make sure those marriages are recognized across state lines, it doesn't guarantee that states won't deny marriage licenses to gay couples again if the court overturns it. You know, and I have to say, one of the most overlooked things in this bill, you know, isn't just about same-sex marriage, but also interracial marriages. Easy to overlook because 94% in the latest polling say they approve, but majorities didn't approve until the late 1990s, which isn't that long ago for some of us.





Now let's move over to Iraq where AFP reports 3 Iraqi soldiers have been killed by a roadside bomb 20 miles outside of Baghdad. MEHR NEWS AGENCY reports:

On Tuesday evening, a heavy gunfire was reported in the US military base at the US Embassy in Baghdad, known as "Unit 3".

The shooting was reported as eyewitnesses had earlier announced the flight of as US military helicopter over Baghdad's Green Zone.

The shooting, the details of which are still unknown, happened in the area of the US military base located in the US Embassy inside the security and protected Green Zone of Baghdad, and some Iraqi sources, such as Sabereen News Telegram channel embarked on broadcasting its video clips.


Staying on the topic of violence, we'll note this from BBC NEWS.


Women in Iraq are facing rising levels of domestic abuse. Cases of gender-based violence have seen a surge of 125% between 2020 and 2021, according to the United Nations.

In the Kurdistan region, women who feel trapped in abusive households often see suicide by self-immolation as their only way out.

The Kurdistan Regional Government has tried to combat violence against women, but many remain at risk.

The BBC has been granted rare access to one of the main hospitals for burns in Iraqi Kurdistan, where many women die of self-inflicted burns.


Meanwhile, the persecution of the LGBTQ community in Iraq continues.  THE SIASET DAILY notes:


The Iraqi Parliament recently drafted a law to ban publications regarding queer issues. This has alarmed the members of the LGBTQ+ community in the country.

The law would punish anyone who would for any reason “publish or promote” homosexuality in state’s media, institutions, schools, universities, social media platforms, books, cinemas, theatres, publications, and in public.

On December 3, 25 MPs, mostly from Shia group Coordination Framework, which opposes influential cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr, who is also Shia, signed a bill proposing the criminalisation of all publishing on LGBTQ+ topics in Iraq.

Individual citizens could be fined one million Iraqi dinars ($685), while government agencies and companies could be fined millions more. 


In the US today, US House Rep Carolyn Maloney will chair a hearing about the rise of violence aimed at the LGBTQ+ community in the US:



     Dec 12, 2022
Press Release
New Human Rights Campaign President Kelley Robinson, Pulse Nightclub Shooting Survivor Brandon Wolf Also Slated to Testify  

Washington D.C. (December 12, 2022)—On Wednesday, December 14, 2022, at 10:00 a.m. ET, Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney, the Chairwoman of the Committee on Oversight and Reform, will hold a hearing to examine how the surge of anti-LGBTQI+ policies advanced by Republican lawmakers and the proliferation of extreme anti-LGBTQI+ rhetoric are fueling a rise in violence against LGBTQI+ people in the United States.  The Committee will hear firsthand testimony from individuals impacted by this violence, including survivors of last month’s mass shooting at the Colorado Springs LGBTQI+ nightclub Club Q that took the lives of five people.

 

“From Colorado Springs to my own district in New York City, communities across the country are facing a terrifying rise of anti-LGBTQI+ violence and extremism,” said Chairwoman Maloney.   “I am deeply grateful that survivors of these attacks are coming before my Committee to share their stories with the American people.  Make no mistake, the rise in anti-LGBTQI+ extremism and the despicable policies that Republicans at every level of government are advancing to attack the health and safety of LGBTQI+ people are harming the LGBTQI+ community and contributing to tragedies like what we saw at Club Q.  Next week, Republicans on my Committee and across the country will be forced to face the real-life impact of their dangerous agenda.  I hope LGBTQI+ individuals across the country will see that Democrats in Congress are fighting for them and will continue to push for policies that protect and expand their ability to live authentically and safely.”

 

On November 19, 2022, a shooter armed with an AR-15 style rifle opened fire on patrons and staff of the LGBTQI+ nightclub Club Q in Colorado Springs, Colorado, killing five people and injuring more than a dozen others.

 

The Club Q shooting comes as extremist, right-wing lawmakers at every level of government have advanced harmful policies that undermine the ability of LGBTQI+ people to live authentically.  In 2021 alone, state legislators introduced more than 340 pieces of anti-LGBTQI+ legislation, including many that target LGBTQI+ people in classroom settings and health care. 

 

Following the passage of Florida’s anti-LGBTQI+ “Don’t Say Gay or Trans” law in March, vitriolic social media content alleging that members of the LGBTQI+ community were “groomers” skyrocketed by more than 400%.  Since 2015, hate crimes have increased by 40%, with the last two years being the deadliest on record for transgender and gender non-conforming people.

 

WHAT:  

 

Full Committee hearing entitled “The Rise of Anti-LGBTQI+ Extremism and Violence in the United States.” 

 

WHEN:

Wednesday, December 14, 2022, at 10:00 a.m. ET

 

WHO:    

 

Panel I


Michael Anderson

Survivor of Club Q Shooting

 

James Slaugh

Survivor of Club Q Shooting

 

Matthew Haynes
Founding Owner of Club Q

 

PANEL II

 

Kelley Robinson

President

Human Rights Campaign

 

Brandon Wolf

Survivor of Pulse Nightclub Shooting

 

Olivia Hunt

Policy Director

National Center for Transgender Equality

 

Jessie Pocock

CEO & Executive Director

Inside Out Youth Services

 

Ilan Meyer

Distinguished Senior Scholar for Public Policy

The Williams Institute

 

Additional Witnesses to be Announced.

 

WATCH:

A livestream will be available on YouTube and the Committee on Oversight and Reform website.  

 

MEDIA:

  

Seating in the hearing room is limited and as a result, credentialed media must RSVP to the Oversight Committee Democrats Press Office at oversightpress@mail.house.gov no later than 5 p.m. ET on December 13, 2022. 

 

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We'll wind down with this  from Will Lehman's campaign:



The following sites updated: