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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Mon Jun 30, 2014, 08:59 AM Jun 2014

John Oliver: America Celebrates Gay Pride While Peddling Homophobia Abroad

CATHERINE THOMPSON – JUNE 30, 2014, 7:55 AM EDT

John Oliver celebrated Pride weekend on Sunday's "Last Week Tonight," marching out a team of cheerleaders and a rock n' roll George Washington to congratulate the U.S. for making big strides toward marriage equality.

But while Americans were out parading, LGBT individuals in Uganda were seeing their rights curtailed by draconian anti-gay laws. Oliver took it upon himself to remind viewers that American anti-gay activists, in particular evangelist Scott Lively, were responsible for Uganda ramping up its persecution of gays.

"Clearly U.S. groups recognized the market for homophobia stateside was dwindling, and so tried to sell it somewhere else," Oliver said. "Meaning that Africa isn't just where we send our losing team's Super Bowl shirts. It's also where we now send our losing political philosophies."

Oliver then played a clip of transgender human rights activist Pepe Julian Onziema's appearance on a Ugandan morning show. The very first question the host posed to Onziema was "Why are you gay?" and while he said it didn't feel unnatural to sit down with Onziema, the host admitted he was "baffled" by the activist.

more
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/john-oliver-pride-uganda-anti-gay-laws

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John Oliver: America Celebrates Gay Pride While Peddling Homophobia Abroad (Original Post) DonViejo Jun 2014 OP
I enjoyed watching the video and have a tiny quibble OKNancy Jun 2014 #1
Someone is funding this ongoing madness in Jamaica malaise Jun 2014 #2
There was a good article on Jamaican's issues at Erasing 76 Crimes el_bryanto Jun 2014 #4
Well you have British colonialism and don't forget the links between malaise Jun 2014 #6
I've been talking about this for weeks, being trashed for it too. Uganda is largely Bluenorthwest Jun 2014 #3
Recommend..important information. n/t Jefferson23 Jun 2014 #5

OKNancy

(41,832 posts)
1. I enjoyed watching the video and have a tiny quibble
Mon Jun 30, 2014, 09:30 AM
Jun 2014

but it's just with the tpm headline writer.
A handful of evangelical extremists peddle homophobia abroad, not "America"

malaise

(268,863 posts)
2. Someone is funding this ongoing madness in Jamaica
Mon Jun 30, 2014, 09:35 AM
Jun 2014
http://jamaica-gleaner.com/latest/article.php?id=53956
<snip>
Thousands of people converged on the St Andrew capital, Half-Way Tree, this evening for a grand rally put on by a group of church leaders on a campaign for the retention of the anti-buggery laws.

The group called Jamaica C.A.U.S.E. (Church Action Uniting Society for Emancipation) led by pastor of the Calvary Gospel Assembly, Donovan Cole, insisted that it will not be silent when it should speak boldly.

-----------------
Background
The Professor is a Fundie Xtian who used to host a religious radio program. Let me stress that he was on a post-retirement contract with none of the benefits of tenure.
The daily demonstrations on the road in front of UWI are being funded by persons unknown, but given some of the loonies involved I suspect some nice RW money from the US.

https://myspot.mona.uwi.edu/marcom/newsroom/entry/5708
<snip>
Statement regarding Termination of Contractual Arrangement with Professor Brendan Bain as Director of CHART

Posted: May 20, 2014

The University of the West Indies sees its role as providing higher education and increasing capacity of the human resources of the region it serves, conducting and publishing research and helping to guide public policy on issues relevant to social and economic development. The academic community plays a pivotal role in carrying out the University’s mandate and is encouraged to engage in public dialogue on matters of national and regional import. The UWI therefore affirms the right of academics to communicate their views based on their work and expertise and in so doing to render public service.

For the last year, there has been considerable controversy surrounding the appropriateness of Professor Brendan Bain serving as Director of CHART. Professor Bain is a retired member of staff of The University of the West Indies who has had a distinguished career primarily in the field of HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean. In June 2001, the CARICOM Secretariat proposed the creation of a Caribbean HIV/AIDS Regional Training (CHART) Centre and two years later the CHART Network was established “for the purpose of contributing to systematic capacity development among institutional and community-based healthcare workers involved in prevention of HIV/AIDS and in care, treatment and support of persons living with HIV and AIDS”.

Professor Brendan Bain has been the Director of CHART since its inception and after his retirement from The UWI in 2013 he was given a two-year post-retirement contract to continue in his role as Director. CHART is not a department of the UWI but a regional project managed by the University under a contract funded by the President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (PEPFAR), the Global Fund and a group of US agencies, to train health workers dealing with patients and communities affected by HIV/AIDS.

The issue in question arose about two years ago in a high-profile case in Belize in which Caleb Orozco, a gay man in Belize, challenged the constitutionality of an 1861 law that criminalises men having sex with men (MSM). Professor Brendan Bain provided a Statement on behalf of a group of churches seeking to retain the 1861 Law. Many authorities familiar with the Brief presented believe that Professor Bain’s testimony supported arguments for retention of the law, thereby contributing to the continued criminalisation and stigmatisation of MSM. This opinion is shared by the lesbian, gay and other groups who are served by CHART.

The majority of HIV and public health experts believe that criminalising men having sex with men and discriminating against them violates their human rights, puts them at even higher risk, reduces their access to services, forces the HIV epidemic underground thereby increasing the HIV risk. These are the positions advocated by the UN, UNAIDS, WHO, PAHO, the international human rights communities and PANCAP (The Pan Caribbean Partnership against AIDS) which is the organisation leading the regional response to the HIV epidemic.

While the University recognises the right of Professor Bain to provide expert testimony in the manner he did, it has become increasingly evident that Professor Bain has lost the confidence and support of a significant sector of the community which the CHART programme is expected to reach, including the loss of his leadership status in PANCAP, thereby undermining the ability of this programme to effectively deliver on its mandate. It is for this reason that the University of the West Indies has decided to terminate the contract of Professor Bain as Director of the Regional Coordinating Unit (RCU) of the Caribbean HIV/Training (CHART) Network.

See attached excerpt from the Chancellor’s 2013 Graduation Address

EXCERPT FROM AN ADDRESS GIVEN BY CHANCELLOR, SIR GEORGE ALLEYNE TO THE 2013 UWI GRADUATING CLASS AT THE CAVE HILL CAMPUS

I have heard activists complain that scholarship and practice need to come together more closely, that the teaching and the discourse around moral, philosophical and constitutional niceties do not relate to the daily infringements suffered by minorities in our societies.

It is in this context that I wish to refer to the negation of human rights of a specific minority in our Caribbean societies. Professor Rose-Marie Antoine and I have just published a book “HIV and Human Rights” which resulted from a Symposium held at Cave Hill 3 years ago. This brought out clearly the degree of stigma and discrimination against persons living with HIV/AIDS and minorities such as homosexuals and many were appalled to know that eleven of our CARICOM countries are the only ones in the Western Hemisphere which still have laws on their books that criminalise consensual homosexual sex in private. Their presence is a clear indication of the disjuncture between the criminal codes and the principles of respect for human dignity and essential freedoms enshrined in the Caribbean constitutions.

They are a reflection of the savings law clause which, as written and understood, insulates laws which were in existence at the time of independence from constitutional challenge. We should note that they are relics of British laws of 1876, and Britain has long repealed such law. Of course, Parliaments if so inclined could amend or repeal these laws by an ordinary majority. However, given the difficulty of parliamentary action, the only recourse for change is through litigation.

It is sometimes suggested that these laws are not enforced and therefore pose no problem, but the evidence is clear that they contribute to the stigma and discrimination suffered by lesbians, gay, bisexual and transgender persons. Not only is such stigma and discrimination inimical to the public health efforts to prevent and control HIV, but they affront the basic rights which are enshrined in the constitutions of our countries.

Given Sir Philip’s injunction that as an institution we should be concerned with the elimination of prejudice, I ask what our University does in this field. I am aware of the programs in human rights which are well supported. But is the culture of our institution such that there is intolerance of intolerance and the infringement of the rights of minorities? Should our institution simply be a reflection of the prejudices of the rest of the community or should it by precept and word speak to the injustice that attends the negation of human rights of a minority? Should it be a leaven of change in the bodies politic?

I am pleased that the Faculty of Law has been proactive in this regard, mixing scholarship with practice and has formed a Rights Advocacy Project whose main objective is “to promote human rights and social justice in the Caribbean through pivotal public interest litigation and related activities of legal and social science research on the situation relating to human rights in the Caribbean and public education”. As I understand it, two of their major efforts now are in relation to the denial of human rights to a specific minority, the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community. I wish them well and trust that their work gets widely known throughout the University. I think that if Sir Philip were here now fifty years later, he would be proud of this work.

---------------
Bain has taken the UWI to court for breach of contract which is a big joke given that post-retirement contracts state clearly that termination with three months notice can go either way.
There is no doubt that this has escalated because money is coming from somewhere.

el_bryanto

(11,804 posts)
4. There was a good article on Jamaican's issues at Erasing 76 Crimes
Mon Jun 30, 2014, 09:49 AM
Jun 2014

Tracing the history of Homophobia in that country. Worth reading.

Bryant

malaise

(268,863 posts)
6. Well you have British colonialism and don't forget the links between
Mon Jun 30, 2014, 10:03 AM
Jun 2014

rural Jamaica, southern country music and Fundie churches (and TV evangelicals enriching themselves with regularity). Never forget the role of the RW churches in destroying liberation theology and Manley (the message of Deliverance promoted by Seaga and the CIA enriched the 'Deliverance Centre preachers).

Thanks for the link, but let me tell you the truth about this place. Some of the loudest homophobics are themselves gay. As I told three of them last week, people might give them a hearing if they addressed the rape of all the children, female and male, the rape of young women on college campuses, rapes in their churches by their leaders and so on.

Some of these folks will do anything to get rich.

 

Bluenorthwest

(45,319 posts)
3. I've been talking about this for weeks, being trashed for it too. Uganda is largely
Mon Jun 30, 2014, 09:38 AM
Jun 2014

Catholic and Anglican. Bishops of both Churches have been preaching in support of this bill and attending rallies to pump up the hate,because the mainstream Churches are in bed with Lively types and DU does not want to admit that. 85% of that country is either Catholic or Anglican. So things that happen there do not happen without that vast majority.

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