Who knew Lady Gaga was such a musician? I saw this video a while back, but thought I should share it…
I love Lady Gaga!
Goo goo for Gaga!
Milk… Go watch it!
My fiance and I just went to see Milk starring Sean Penn. It’s amazing. You have to go see it!
We left the theatre thinking, why do you know so little about our history?
Harvey Milk knocked down the walls for gays, not just in San Francisco, but all around the world. He did so much for gay rights and if you don’t know who he is, you have to see this movie!
Milk was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including best actor for Sean Penn and he deserves it!
Trapped in the wrong body: an in-depth look at gender identity
By Steven Keddy
Kiena is a tall, skinny woman. Her legs are stick-thin and are accentuated by her four-inch heels. At five foot eleven (without heels) and 120 pounds, the 30-year-old could have been a supermodel if she had that body ten years ago. Her silky-black skin is aged from years of partying, but she wears her makeup well enough to cover any imperfections. From a distance, her appearance is striking, but if you look closely, you can see she has lived a tough life.
Her personality is so overwhelming it draws you in. She’s the type of person who can grab your attention and hold it for hours. She talks so fast that you can barely keep up and you have to struggle to catch her words through her broken-English and thick Somali accent. But there’s something about her that you just can’t turn your eyes away.
Born in Somalia in 1978 with the name Corey, Kiena was not your average boy.
“I wanted to be the princess,” said Kiena. Growing up as a boy was tough for Kiena. “I wanted to be the girl.” She did not know what to call it as a child because being a transsexual was practically unheard of in East Africa.
Playing dress-up with her two younger sisters was always her favourite game. She would take clothes and necklaces from her mom’s and her sisters’ closets and dress up as the princess. And she would dress her sisters in her boy clothes that she never wanted to wear. “I always wanted to become the woman one. That’s how I knew it,” she said. “Something inside, deep inside. I wanted to become a woman in my life. I knew it.”
Kiena remembers the first time she dressed up as a girl. She was seven years old. She waited for her parents to leave then she put on her sister’s dress and her mother’s necklaces. “I was feeling good,” she said. “When my mom came home, they beat me up.”
Her parents stormed into her room, “No! That’s wrong,” they yelled at her. “Something’s wrong with him,” her parents would say.
“They were scared,” Kiena thought. “They always knew it.”
“Where I come from, they don’t believe in homosexual people,” said Kiena. “Back home, you can’t be who you are.” She never knew anyone like her. “If you be gay, they make your life miserable,” she said. Not only was she confused about her sexuality, but her gender identity was always on her mind. Kiena knew her family would never accept her as a woman. Her parents told her, “Oh, you can change, you can change, you can change.”
And she tried. “That was a pressure for me,” she said. “I tried and I suffered the price. It’s not me. I pushed myself to be a straight guy, but it’s not me,” she said as tears welled up in her eyes. Her friends and family blamed her for being different; they said it was her choice. “It’s not a choice,” she tried to convince them. “Psychologically, it’s not a choice. If I made the choice I’d be married, have children but it’s not my choice.”
“The pressure killed me inside. Cry, cry. Why God made me this way?” Kiena spent years struggling with her identity, she blamed God for making her so different until one day, she had an epiphany. “It’s not God punishing me, who I am. It’s me,” she said, “This is how I feel now. Why don’t I make myself happy?” she asked herself. “I want to be woman. That’s my dignity, my feeling in my body.”
The lines of gender identity are confusing to say the least. It is all a matter of how people identify themselves. There are many names given to classify people who identify with a gender other than their birth gender. Transgender is a broad term for someone who is uncomfortable with or rejects their birth-assigned gender. This could include transsexuals. A transsexual is a person who believes they were born into the wrong body. In their minds they feel like they are a person of the opposite gender they were born with. A lot of transsexuals live happily without undergoing any sort of physical transformation, but most transsexuals decide to make some sort of physical alteration to their bodies, usually in the form of hormone treatments and plastic surgery for things like breast enhancement or reduction and eventually gender reassignment surgery.
Intersexed people are people who are physically born with both male and female organs, or with sex organs that are gender ambiguous. These people used to be referred to with the more politically incorrect term “hermaphrodite”. Sometimes all of these groups of people are incorrectly called transvestites. But a transvestite is just used to refer to a cross-dresser (someone who gets emotional satisfaction by dressing in the clothes of the opposite sex). Transvestites do not necessarily live as the person of the opposite sex; they usually just dress like them from time to time for their psychological well-being. Similarly, the term drag queen or king is often incorrectly used. People who do drag are performers; they perform songs or dances in the likeness of the opposite sex. The term drag was coined in Elizabethan times when only men performed on stage. It was used as an acronym for “dressed as girl”.
Overall, the issue is not the title given to people. Often times a person’s identity can be classified by more than one of the titles or sometimes with none of these titles. Gender identity, similar to sexuality, is not easy to classify. The lines are easily blurred. Gender identity is more a matter of a person feeling either male or female, or both, regardless of the gender they were born with and regardless of the individual’s sexuality.
“I am tranny,” Kiena laughed. “I am transsexual.”
Kiena and her family moved to Canada when she was 14 years old. “It’s different where I come from and here,” she said. “A lot of freedom here. People can be who they are.”
“God, you brought me to the right place,” she praised. “ My wish, my dream came true.”
As a teenager, now living in Canada, Kiena felt as if her eyes had been opened to a whole new world. “When I came here, I see gay freedom,” and that’s when she realized, “I can be a gay, huh?” So she tried to live her young adult years as a gay man, but she knew this wasn’t the life she wanted. She was not being true to herself.
She saw a lot of transsexuals living happy lives and she thought, “Why can’t I live the life they have?” She always dressed as a woman when she was home alone, but she never dressed as a woman in public until she started to perform. She began doing drag shows at gay bars in Kitchener and Hamilton. “For me to be able to perform, it was fun. I was Kiena.” After only a few years as a drag performer, she became very well known in Hamilton. She has a natural talent for dancing and performing. She spent most of her week at gay nightclubs in Hamilton. From Thursday to Sunday, she was out dancing and hosting drag shows.
As the years went on she found that she was actually able support herself on the money she was making by doing these shows. Eventually she was performing all over the greater Toronto area. From London to Toronto, she was becoming somewhat of a celebrity in the gay community.
By the time she reached her late twenties, Kiena was getting tired of performing and doing drag shows. The years of late nights and parties took their toll on her, physically and mentally. Her life was upside-down. She was living her nights as a woman, but her days she was still trying to pose as a man. She was still feeling the pressures of society. “Every society, everywhere you go, some people, they accept you, some people, they think something’s wrong with me.” But again she came to a point in her life where she needed to forget about what everyone else wanted and focus on what she needed. “It’s not something wrong with me. It’s something wrong with you if you don’t accept me,” said Kiena. “It’s tough. I was upset. I cried, but you can do nothing.” She was ready to take the next step. She was ready to become a woman.
Kiena met with a psychologist, who told her, “You’re ready to do it.” She was put on a regiment or hormones to begin her transformation. When a transsexual makes the transition, the majority of the physical changes are made through hormone treatments. Male-to-female transsexuals, take estrogen and testosterone blockers. The hormones help to redistribute body fat to more feminine areas, like the hips and chest. It creates breast development, softens the skin and softens facial features to a more female look. “You mentally become woman,” Kiena explained. “You act like woman. Your mentality changes.” As well as her two years of hormone treatments, Kiena has also undergone laser hair removal on her face and she started wearing weaves to make her feel more naturally female.
She lives everyday, day and night as a woman, “I live happy now.”
The next step for Kiena is to get breast implants. She wants to do it on her birthday this March. “I always dream, the day I’m born, I want to become woman.” She also plans to legally change her name on the same day to Kiena Shakley. “You don’t have to explain to people anymore, ‘I’m transsexual.’ They see you as a woman, which I want to be.”
Kiena has put herself on the waiting list for gender reassignment surgery. “In five years, I want to be full woman.” She hopes that by making the full transformation, her family will finally accept her. “Maybe in the future when they see I have everything done, when they see my ID say Kiena, they’ll respect me maybe, and I hope so.”
The best way to protest… Song & Dance!
An all-star cast made this musical in protest to Proposition h8…It was created for funnyordie.com and it is definitely funny!
The video stars jack Black, Margret Cho, Kathy Najimy, Allison Janney, Neil Patrick Harris, John C. Reilly and many more… Check it out!
I love it!
That’s So NOT Gay!
I’m so digging this new “Think b4 you speak” Campaign! Just like the Hilary Duff video below, the PSA says using the word gay as a synonym for bad is derogatory and offensive.
One of my favourite comediennes Wanda Sykes made a video too!
I agree with the site, say something original, people!
Connecticut!
Same-sex couples in Connecticut won the right to marry in a ruling by the Supreme Court Friday October 10th. Click here to read more…
Hopefully more states will follow soon!
Marriage is my right
As a Canadian, I am constantly reminding myself, how lucky I am to live in such a free country, where I have the right to marry whoever I love.
I am proud of Canada for being a pioneer in the fight for equality and basic human rights. Only a hand-full of countries around the world has legalized gay marriage. The Netherlands was the first country in 2001, Belgium in 2003, Canada was next in 2005, followed shortly by Spain, South Africa in 2006 and Norway was the last country to legalize gay marriage earlier this year. That’s six countries in the world…SIX out of about 194 countries.
There are of course countries that offer partnerships, but they won’t call it marriage. There are about a dozen titles for these partnerships like, same sex unions, civil partnerships, registered partnerships, civil recognition and domestic partnerships. Some people would think, fine, I don’t care if you let me use the word marriage, I just want my partner and I to be recognized by law as a couple. But the problem is not just the word itself; it is the benefits that come along with marriage, as well as simply being recognized as an equal part of society. Not allowing gays and lesbians to use the word marriage is demeaning. It says same sex couples are not equal and should not be allowed the same freedoms as straight couples.
But, of course, civil recognition is better than no recognition. In nearly 85 countries, like Panama and Barbados, it is still illegal just to be gay (Or more so the act of having gay sex). And in some of those countries, like Jamaica and India, only gay sex between men is illegal. Gay people in these countries are often punished with prison, torture, sodomy and sometimes death. This CNN report shows a bit of what it is like to be gay in a country like Iraq.
So why are these barbaric practices still in place today? It scares me to know that there is so much intolerance and hatred in this world. Even the most powerful country in the world, the US, is still condemning gay marriage and basic gay rights.
Luckily there has been some progress. The state of Massachusetts legalized gay marriage in 2004 and in May of this year, same sex couples were given the right to marry in the state of California. However, there are already people who are trying to take that right away from them. Proposition 8, also known as, “The Eliminates Right of Same-Sex Couples to Marry Act” will appear on the November 2008 ballot in California. Fortunately, I am not the only person that finds it disturbing to see the words, “eliminates” and “right” in the same title of a state proposition. Sites like NoOnProp8.com and VoteNoOnProposition8.com, whose tagline is “Californians against eliminating basic human rights,” have begun to show up. And Hollywood heavyweights, Brad Pitt and Steven Spielberg each donated $100,000 to efforts to stop California’s marriage initiative.
But of course, there’s a flip side. ProtectMarriage.com is encouraging people to vote yes. They feel, if a same-sex couple gets married, it is somehow an infringement on their rights and freedoms. But what about rights and freedoms of the LGBT community? As if a same-sex marriage will have any sort affect on their own marriage. These are usually the same people who think it’s fine that Britney Spears had a 55-hour marriage. Or as it was put by Tina Fey in a skit as Sarah Palin on SNL, “Marriage is meant to be a sacred institution between two unwilling teenagers.” Why don’t these left wing “marriage protectors” fight against the people who are truly threatening the sanctity of marriage?
Typically, these people tend to ignore the fact that marriage was originally instituted when women were considered property and the wedding was a business transaction where the woman’s father would transfer property rights to the new husband.
Although I know a big reason why gay people are still condemned for being themselves has a lot to do with religion, I don’t want to bring religion into this particular discussion, but I do want to make one point. I realized a long time ago that religion is not for me. To me it just promotes exclusion; it says, those who are different don’t belong. And for centuries people have been able to mask their hatred behind religion, but it is time that we accept everyone for who they are, and interpret religious publications like the Bible and the Qur’an as metaphors and not word-for-word translations.
That being said, the only way to truly stand up for yourself in a democracy, like Canada or the US, is with your vote. Whether you are in either country, a very important election is coming up. Although Barack Obama and Joe Biden do not outright support same-sex marriage, they have stood up for gay rights and Obama is continually including the LGBT community in all of his speeches and he even has an LGBT section on his website. He also opposes a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage.
John McCain on the other hand, supports Proposition 8 and D.O.M.A. (Defense of Marriage Act), which stipulates that no state is required to recognize a same-sex marriage from another state and it prohibits the federal government from recognizing same-sex marriages. And he has said that he does not believe that same-sex couples adopting children is “appropriate.” Essentially to me, what that says is, he believes that children are better off living in adoption agencies than in the homes of gay people.
Thankfully, in Canada, the fight has already been fought. I remember when same-sex marriage finally became legal in 2005. It was covered a lot in the news that the decision was being made by the Supreme Court of Canada that day (the day before my birthday, June 28, 2005). My partner and I were on the edge of our seats waiting for the news. Just knowing that people in Ottawa, who we would probably never meet were currently deciding our future for us. I was anxious. I had faith in Canada, but I did not know enough about the system to really know what was about to happen. Finally, Carlos and I were sitting hand-in-hand when they announced same-sex marriage is legal in Canada. We felt accepted, we were so appreciative and finally we were equal. Soon after, we were engaged and I was legally entitled to refer to my partner of four-years as my fiancé.
Gay marriage became legal in Canada under Paul Martin’s Liberal Government so before Conservative Stephen Harper became the Prime Minister in 2006, he swayed voters by saying that he would revisit the debate on gay-marriage if he was elected. And that’s exactly what he did. My fiancé and I felt hopeless, we were afraid the Conservatives would take away our newly, rightfully granted rights. The Conservatives held a free vote in the House of Commons on a motion calling on the government to restore the “traditional” definition of marriage. MPs voted 175-123 against the motion. 110 of the votes in favour of the move came from Conservatives, while 13 votes came from Liberals and the NDP and Bloc Quebecois all voted against it.
With the federal election coming up on October 14, there is a lot of speculation that the Conservatives will become a majority government. If they do become a majority, they will not only be able bring same-sex marriage back to vote, but they would have the power to instate laws and make them irreversible.
So please reevaluate your leader of choice. Learn about where they stand on matters like human rights and make your vote count.
The NDP have a long history of standing up for the minority, standing up for equality and standing up for what’s right. So as I go to the polling station, I will be giving my vote to the party who is fighting not just my rights, but for everyone’s basic human rights.
I realize that I might sound a little melodramatic about the whole subject. I probably come across as prejudice myself by referring to evangelists and left wings as “these people”, but I think it illustrates how polarized our views and beliefs are. And it is something that is very personal to me. Although our society has come a long way, gay people are still treated like second-class citizens. We continue to face discrimination and hatred because of so many people’s narrow-minded views. I don’t understand how people can be against any sort of love whether it be gay or straight. If two people love each other, why does anything else matter? And on that note, I will be proudly marrying my fiance next year and I hope that one day soon, people all around the world will be able to enjoy the same right!

Photos courtesy Carlos Melendez
Rathergate

Dan Rather was one of the most respected television reporters for nearly 25 years. And in a seemingly symbolic move; a passing of the torch perhaps, Rather’s career came to end in 2004, ironically because of bloggers.
Rather and his team put together a report about President Bush. In the report they showed documents that claimed that, among other things, Bush was a draft dodger and that he got special treatment in the National Guard because of his powerful family. However, immediately after the report aired, viewers began to question the credibility of the documents. And these people began to speak out about the falsities they believed 60 Minutes had portrayed in the best way they knew how: Blogs.
Ten years ago, people would not have had a platform to voice their opinions or objections about the media. The blogosphere has opened the door for that independent voice that is so crucial to a modern, free society. Blogs like rathergate.org have turned up in the fight to keep the media honest.
Now, I’m not saying that I agree that Dan Rather should have been forced to resign. I think he and his news team made a big mistake by not finding a second source or taking the documents to experts for some kind of verification. And as much as I would love to prove George W was a draft dodger, as a journalist, I could/would never accept reports by fax, from some guy and report them as fact if I could not prove it. Journalism is not journalism without credibility.
As a young journalist I am happy to know someone is there, with an eye on the media to keep us honest. I don’t want to be a part of an industry that accepts speculation or accusation for fact.
And as a new blogger, entering this world of odd lingo and over-zealous rant, known as the blogosphere, I am glad to have a forum to state my own objections about the media and about the world in general.
AIDS Walk for Life

The AIDS Network is a great organization and for many frontline HIV/AIDS organizations, The AIDS Network is their only help.
Below is a story I wrote about the AIDS Walk for Life in my college paper the Satellite
HIV infection rates are on the rise in Canada and youths 18-30 years old are the most affected segment. Infections among women are also on the rise.
“We are concerned about the rise in infections,” said Lena Smye, the director of marketing and fund development for The AIDS Network. “Infections are up, but funding is down.”
Earlier this year, the Canadian government cut HIV/AIDS funding by 30 per cent. And with HIV/AIDS medication costing upwards of $60,000 per individual per year, the people living with the disease stand the most to lose.
Sandy is a 43-year-old Hamiltonian. More than 18 years ago, while she was studying to become an engineer at University, Sandy became HIV positive.
“What HIV does more than anything is, it shatters dreams,” says Sandy. “I thought I was at the top of the world. At 24, you think you’re invincible. It just happened like that,” said Sandy with a snap of her fingers. “I never knew that 15 minutes was going to haunt the rest of my life.”
Beyond the physical pain of being HIV positive, Sandy says that what hurts the most is the stigma. “People with HIV get treated differently,” said Sandy. “I shouldn’t have to hide it. I shouldn’t feel shame.”
The AIDS network is trying to end the stigma by changing people’s perception of those infected with the disease by educating youths and getting young people involved.
“Youth are a very powerful population in terms of their influence on society in general,” explained Smye. “We believe [youth] are our biggest hope in achieving our mission to recognize and respond to the stigma and challenges posed by HIV/AIDS on individuals and communities through education and support.”
The AIDS Network’s best hope to raise funds and offset their losses from government support is the AIDS Walk for Life. The AIDS Walk is an annual walkathon held in downtown Hamilton every September.
“As a part time professor at Mohawk, I see how young people at Mohawk College take charge when it comes to charitable work.” Said Smye. “Their full-steam-ahead style when it comes to supporting something they believe in is an example we want others in the community to adopt.”
Lena and Sandy encourage students to get involved and sign up for The AIDS Walk for Life. The walk is on Sunday September 21 at 1pm and starts at Christ’s Church Cathedral on James St and ends at Dundurn Heritage Park.
“Quite simply, we cannot reach our goal of $25,000 without the students of Mohawk College,” said Smye.
To register to walk or to sponsor a walker you can go to www.aidsnetwork.ca.
To find the walk closest to you, click here
