Showing posts with label Matthew Shepard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matthew Shepard. Show all posts

Monday, November 19, 2018

News Round-Up: November 19, 2018


Some news items you might have missed:

• I've been meaning to feature the oh-so-handsome blond man above for some time, but I don't know who he is. A reader sent his pic and I was quite smitten by the good looks. Anyone know who he is? #woof #BeardCameNice

• Folks have launched a GoFundMe campaign to raise money for a bronze plaque honoring Matthew Shepard at the Washington National Cathedral. The crypt where he lies isn't open to the public, so folks would like to design and install a plaque in the chapel.

• This Chinese author was sentenced to 10 years in prison for including gay sex scenes in her latest novel.

• Woofy Prince Harry carries on the legacy of his mother, Princess Diana, by raising awareness for HIV. Check out the new PSA as he flips the script on HIV testing saying it's something to be proud, not embarrassed, about.



• The Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne, Peter Comensoli, says religious schools in Australia should be accepting of gay teachers IF they keep their relationships hidden. He also thinks its better if they and their partners live far away from the school in which they teach.

• A gay councilman in Texas was removed from office after a homophobic political foe leaked his Grindr pics to the public.

• A new study by psychologists at the University of Pennsylvania found that too much Facebook can contribute to depression and loneliness. The study found those who cut back on their social media consumption found their moods improved.

• UK rugby legend Gareth Thomas was the victim of a hate crime by a 16-year-old in his hometown of Cardiff.

“Last night I was a victim in my home city of a hate crime for my sexuality,” Thomas told his Twitter followers. “I want to say thank you to the police, who were involved and allowed me to do restorative justice to the people that did this because I thought they could learn more that way.”

Restorative justice is a system that “that focuses on the rehabilitation of offenders through reconciliation with victims and the community at large.”

It comes as no surprise that a champion of Thomas' caliber would opt for the teaching experience of restorative justice. The approach is also helpful to those who are assaulted to see their assailant be held accountable.

Watch Thomas' video below.

Friday, October 26, 2018

Matthew Shepard Finally Laid To Rest

Matthew Shepard

Matthew Shepard, who became a symbol of the LGBTQ rights movement in the 1990s, was finally laid to rest today at Washington National Cathedral 20 years after his death.

Bishop Gene Robinson, the first openly gay bishop in the Episcopal Church, presided over the service which was attended by over 2,000 people.

From The Washington Post:
In his homily, Robinson shared an anecdote from the first police officer who arrived at the site of Shepard’s attack, a remote fence to which his battered body was lashed and had spent the cold night. When the officer arrived, he said, a deer was laying beside Shepard’s body. Upon her arrival, the animal looked straight into the officer’s eyes and ran away.

“What she said was: ‘That was the good Lord, no doubt in my mind.’ And there’s no doubt in my mind either. God has always loved Matt,” Robinson said.
Robinson urged the crowd to not just remember Shepard, but to continue to be vigilant regarding the ongoing discrimination against the LGBTQ community.

“I don’t want anyone to leave here without being reminded that you are loved by the god of all that is,” Robinson told the crowd. “You are loved beyond your wildest imagining.”

Robinson said more than once during his comments to “go vote.”

He closed with these words: “There are three things I’d say to Matt: ‘Gently rest in this place. You are safe now. And Matt, welcome home.’ Amen.”

You can watch the ceremony below.



Saturday, October 13, 2018

Podcast: 20th Anniversary Of Matthew Shepard, Taylor Swift, Facebook & Broadway's 'Once On This Island'

The Randy Report podcast is your source for LGBT political, pop culture and entertainment news via podcast

In this week's podcast:

• The nation observed the 20th anniversary of the murder of Matthew Shepard

• Anti-LGBTQ forces in Romania faced an epic fail in trying to outlaw marriage equality

• New Jersey moves to protect transgender students

• The Trump administration requires foreign diplomatic employees' partners to be married in order to be in the US or face deportment

• Taylor Swift goes political speaking out for LGBTQ rights and Democratic candidates

• Facebook added coming out as a new "Life Event" option as the US observed National Coming Out Day

• New polling shows 70% of Americans support protecting LGBTQ folks from discrimination

• Plus my review of the fantastic Broadway revival of 'Once On This Island'

All that and more in this episode of The Randy Report. Hit the play button below.



Thursday, October 11, 2018

News Round-Up: October 11, 2018


Some news items you might have missed:

• The above graphic is dedicated to any and everyone considering National Coming Out Day... #comeoutcomeoutwhereveryouare

• Activists are warning people with HIV and other chronic illnesses to check small print when getting a new health insurance policy. Some insurers are refusing to allow co-payment assistance coupons from drug manufacturers from counting towards annual deductibles.

• Americans have ranked Barack Obama as the president who's done the best job in their lifetimes.

• Observing the 20 anniversary since Matthew Shepard was kidnapped and beaten then left to die on a cold Wyoming night tied to a fence, his parents have announced his remains will be interred at the Washington National Cathedral later this month.

• The 750,000 citizens of North Dakota, where Democrat Sen. Heidi Heitkamp is struggling in the polls, could very well decide for the country who controls the Senate after midterm elections.

• UK recording artist (and Randy Report favorite) Calum Scott offers his own coming out story for National Coming Out Day.

Scott recounts a painful part of his young adult life - processing the complex emotions of being a gay teen and letting the world around him aware of his sexual orientation. Friends abandoned him early on, and it hurt. But in the poignant profile, he says he found the courage to be honest about himself through music.




Saturday, October 6, 2018

20 Years Ago Tonight

Matthew Shepard

20 years ago tonight, a young man (21-years-old) was kidnapped and driven to a remote rural area of Wyoming.

He was was robbed, beaten, tortured, tied to a rail fence in near freezing temperatures and left to die.

He barely clung to life for 6 days before finally passing.

He was gay.

His name was Matthew Shepard.

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Matthew Shepard's Mother Denounces Donald Trump's "Hate" Rhetoric


A new campaign spot from Priorities USA features Judy Shepard, the mother of Matthew Shepard, denouncing the dark and hateful rhetoric coming out of the Donald Trump campaign.

As many know, Matthew Shepard was the victim of a hate crime in 1998 in Laramie, Wyoming. Two men pretended to be gay after meeting Matthew, then they kidnapped him, beat him and left him for dead tied to a fence in the cold Wyoming night.

“When I see the hate that Donald Trump brings to his campaign for president, it terrifies me. Words have an influence. Violence causes pain. Hate can rip us apart. I know what can happen as the result of hate, and Donald Trump should never be our president.”

Monday, October 12, 2015

A Tribute To Matthew Shepard - Seventeen Years Later


San Franciso-based LGBT activist Aaron E. Baldwin penned this sensitive and heartfelt essay honoring the memory of Matthew Shepard, the Wyoming student who died 17 years ago today.

Shepard was attacked and left to die tied to a country fence post because his attackers (currently serving life sentences in prison) decided he was gay, and for that, he deserved to be tortured and left to die.

Aaron is so spot on with his tribute, I asked to post it here.

I heartily suggest you follow his Facebook page.

*****************************************************


A Tribute To Matthew Shepard

Seventeen years ago I heard the news on the television about the brutal attack on a young man named Matthew Shepard. He was a 21 year-old bright and sensitive young man, who was a freshman at the University of Wyoming. On October 6th 1998, two young men took Matthew outside of the city limits and proceeded to; stripped him naked, tied him to a fence post with an utility cable, savagely beat him with the end of a .357 Magnum pistol until his skull broke open, tortured him and then just left him there to die, in the darkness of that cold Wyoming autumn evening.

"He was covered with blood, except for where the tears had run down his face." This is how the police officer who found Matthew described the scene. "He looked more like a more a scarecrow, than a human being. He had been left there, still tied to that wooden cross and left there to die.” His last waking moments spent as a victim of severe ridicule, oppression, rejection, hate and homophobia.

However, Matthew would not die there on that fence post. He would wage to a non-stop fight for almost five (5) days. Hanging on to his life, until his parents were able to make it to his bedside and say their goodbyes...to their only son.

OUR LITTLE FRIEND

Our little friend, Matthew Shepard, is now dead and were all been left behind to decide how? How will we deal with all of our anger, our grief and our frustrations? We have all stood together in silence at very moving candlelight vigils. We have marched together at protests and memorialize his death. We have even denounced all of the anti-gay rhetoric, the Catholic Church’s horrible response and even those who chose to use Matthew's death as a way to make money or mobilize voters. Now what do we do?

The great leaders, Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, continue to call upon us from their graves. They remind us to take seriously the use of force and to be relentless in our pursuit of non-violent resistance. They also remind us, that we cannot begin our own journey until we have learned to also love (and forgive) our own enemies. I don't exactly know what this now means for the LGBT community, but I am afraid that we may not be a party to a long-term solution... until we ourselves learn to love and forgive sincerely.

So now we must all again decide how we will honor Matthew Shepard's life? If love doesn't conquer all of our anger, grief and frustration; if we continue refusing to forgive, we could very well reverse all the gains that Matthew's death has brought to us and only serve to dishonor his memory in the process. But if we work this out and learn to forgive our enemies; if we take the moral high ground and chose to work relentlessly, confronting the untruths and to end this cycle of anger and violence... the victory in the end will be ours.

WHO WAS MATTHEW SHEPARD?

Matthew Shepard did not look like your stereotypical Gay boy. After all, he was small for his age, weighing in at maybe a 110 pounds at most... and standing only 5' 2" tall. It is said he was rather uncoordinated and that he wore braces from the age of 13 until the day he died. Matthew Shepard was a human being, and yet people still asked me "Why do you care so much." To which I always reply, "because Matthew Shepard was a human being."

Matthew is today in death, what he most likely could have never been in life, considering the superficial world that we all live in. I believe strongly in my heart, that Matthew was put on this Earth for that very reason. His death would have to be so hateful and disgusting, that it would shake the entire LGBT community to its very core. My God, how could a death like Matthew's do anything less than that?

In the past I was stunned to hear (coming from the mouth of another Gay man) when the anniversary of Matthew's death was being discussed, “Am I suppose to have my heart break for some guy that was in the wrong place, at the wrong time?”

To which I replied, “Matthew Shepard was NOT in the wrong place at the wrong time. He was right where he was supposed to be! He had been lured from that campus bar by two men pretending to be gay. He was driven to a remote area of the east side of Laramie, tied to a split-rail fence, tortured, beaten and pistol-whipped. His head severely fractured by his attackers and all while Matthew was begging for his life. This human being, named Matthew Shepard, was then left alone to dead, still tied with an utility cable to that split-rail fence like an animal"

"Should your heart break for Matthew Shepard?” I said. "If it does not you should question weather you have a heart at all, because Matthew Shepard is dead and you are still alive."

A VOW FOR MATTHEW

"I will speak out for justice and for freedom, for your life, my life and for the lives of others.

I will call upon my government to equally protect each of its citizens.

I will act when I see injustice around me.

I will seek peace in my life and in all my actions.

I will value my own journey and uniqueness.

I will also value the journey and lives of those who are different from me.

I will remember Matthew Shepard and all those who have been lost.

I will live my life with courage, with love and with hope... as a tribute to their lives."

*Delivered at Matthew's funeral, perhaps the best way to remember Matthew is to take this vow!

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Laramie City Council Approves LGBT Protections 17 Years After Matthew Shepard's Death


Seventeen years after the murder of Matthew Shepard, the Laramie City Council has approved, by a vote of 7-2, an anti-discrimination ordinance that prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity in housing, employment and access to public facilities such as restaurants.

Local organizers focused their efforts on Laramie after the Legislature repeatedly rejected anti-discrimination bills, most recently early this year. The Laramie Nondiscrimination Task Force presented a draft ordinance to the City Council last summer. Jeran Artery, head of the group Wyoming Equality which has lobbied for the anti-discrimination measures at the state Legislature, said he was thrilled with the council vote.

Judy Shepard, Matt Shepard's mother, is active in a Denver-based foundation that bears her son's name and focuses on equality issues. "I'm thrilled that Laramie's doing it, at the same time sort of saddened that the state of Wyoming can't see fit to do that as well," Shepard told The Associated Press in a telephone interview Wednesday before the council vote from Washington, D.C. "Maybe the rest of Wyoming will understand this is about fellow human beings and not something that's other than what they are."

The state legislature has repeatedly failed to pass similar state-wide protections for LGBTs.

Saturday, February 7, 2015

Trailer: Matt Shepard Is A Friend Of Mine


The award-winning documentary Matt Shepard Is A Friend Of Mine opens today in New York City, Houston, and Portland, Oregon, with more cities added (Los Angeles and Chicago) beginning next week.

Matt Shepard Is A Friend Of Mine explores the life and tragic death of Matthew Shepard, the gay student brutally murdered in Laramie, Wyoming in one of the most notorious hate crimes in U.S. history.

From the official website:

Matt Shepard is a Friend of Mine follows director Michele Josue, a close friend of Matt's, as she travels to pivotal locations in Shepard’s life, interviewing other friends and family members, and gaining insight into the beautiful life and devastating loss of Matthew Shepard.

While we've come a long way in the last fifteen years, LGBT inequality and hate crimes are still very real today, and parts of Matt's story are unfortunately still very much a part of young people's realities. Though framed through a very personal lens, Matt Shepard is a Friend of Mine tells a universal story that highlights the responsibility we have now to make sure young people around the world are not at risk of falling victim to the same story ending Matt was.

You can find a list of screenings across the US and Canada here.

Watch the trailer below.


Sunday, October 12, 2014

On The 16th Anniversary of the Death of Matthew Shepard



On the 16th anniversary of the passing of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard, his parents talk on the painful memories of their son's violent death, why they didn't seek the death penalty for his attackers, and the Matthew Shepard Foundation, which they founded to raise awareness around homophobia and diversity.