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Lounge => General Discussion => Topic started by: MAY on November 07, 2015, 03:06:13 PM

Title: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: MAY on November 07, 2015, 03:06:13 PM
QuoteIt kills me to write this post. I have spent more time worshiping Beyonc? than just about any other pop star. I've spent countless hours dancing to "Grown Woman" alone in my apartment. I've been the only guy in a dance class aimed at teaching the "Single Ladies" dance, and I loved every second of it. Beyonc? has been queen in my life since the first time I watched the "Crazy In Love" video.

But.

Over the past few months, Beyonc? has repeatedly refused the opportunity to speak out against the legalization of discrimination against LGBT people in her hometown. And as hard as it is to say this, her refusal should raise serious questions about her support for her gay, bisexual and transgender fans.

Last night Houstonians voted to repeal the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance (HERO), a city ordinance prohibiting discrimination on the basis of 15 different characteristics, including race, sex, disability, sexual orientation and gender identity. HERO?s repeal is likely the biggest setback for LGBT civil rights since the 2008 passage of Prop 8 in California.

In August, I found out that HERO would be going up for a public repeal vote, and my stomach turned. Laws like HERO tend to lose, badly, when they?re put up for a public vote. I thought about my friends in Houston -- activists I had worked with on HERO for months, people who had dedicated their work, their free time, and their emotional energy to ending discrimination in their hometown. I imagined watching their hard work erased at the ballot box. I imagined having to sit through another expensive, brutal campaign about whether it should be legal to discriminate against LGBT people. I wanted to help.

So I did what any god-fearing gay man does in his time of need. I turned to Beyonc?.

In August, I wrote a blog asking Beyonc? to make a single Instagram post in support of HERO. My decision to focus on Beyonc? wasn?t random. She?s spoken supportively about the LGBT community before. She?s occasionally chosen to use her Instagram account to take positions on social issues. She?s the world?s most famous Houstonian -- the ?Visit Houston? website has a page dedicated to Beyonc?, who said ?this will always be home to me!? And with fifty million followers, she has one of the most influential social media presences in the world. A single post from her would have motivated young voters to the polls, focused national attention on the fight over HERO, and dramatically reframed the narrative away from the talking points of HERO?s opponents, who ended up saturating media coverage of the ordinance.

To my surprise, a group of young Houston activists turn the post into a fully-fledged online campaign. Before I knew it, HERO supporters in Houston were using the hashtag #BeyBeAHERO to urge Beyonc? to back the ordinance on social media. During a time when many LGBT activists would have been groaning about the prospect of a public vote, there was a kind of electricity surrounding the idea that a scrappy group of Houstonians might be able to convince the world?s biggest pop star to help them protect the ordinance they had fought so hard for.

The campaign garnered the attention of local and national media outlets including NBC, Buzzfeed, Vox, Salon, Upworthy, Houston Chronicle, and Texas Monthly. Major LGBT organizations, including GLAAD, Courage Campaign, and the National LGBTQ Task Force joined in asking for the superstar?s help. Even Sylvester Turner, the leading Democratic mayoral candidate in Houston, launched a petition asking Beyonc? to back the ordinance.

But despite repeated requests for help from HERO supporters in Houston, Beyonc? declined to comment.

On Instagram, I watched her post images from her Vogue cover shoot.

?It?s only August. I?m sure she?ll say something.?

As the fight over HERO continued, opponents flooded the airwaves with ads falsely claiming that HERO would endanger women by letting men into public restrooms ? a scare tactic that?s proven incredibly successful at eroding support for non-discrimination laws. HERO supporters worked to gather endorsements from businesses and faith leaders, including Beyonc??s pastor, who spoke strongly in favor of the ordinance. Early polling showed that, while supporters had a slight advantage, the vote would be close.

The drumbeat for Beyonc? to speak up in defense of HERO continued. Two weeks into the #BeyBeAHERO campaign, the hashtag had made over 10 million impressions on social media.

But still, nothing.

One night, I found myself lying on the grass in a park by my apartment, distraught. I had done everything I knew how to do to get Beyonc??s team to react. I had bugged every reporter friend, forwarded every press hit, tweeted incessantly. I had given it my best shot. And I was starting to feel like a failure.

On Instagram, I watched Beyonc? post a photo of a pizza.

?Why hasn?t she said something??

Early voting began on October 19. A number of Houston celebrities, including Matt Bomer and Jim Parsons, came out in support of the ordinance. Even Hillary Clinton tweeted her support for HERO, urging voters to vote for the measure and oppose discrimination.

But despite those endorsements, young voters, who were expected to support HERO, weren?t turning out for early voting. Supporters worried that the low turnout among young Houstonians could spell doom for non-discrimination measure on Election Day.

Behind the scenes, activists again urged Beyonc??s team to post something, anything voicing her opposition to anti-LGBT discrimination and encouraging Houstonians to keep HERO.

On Instagram, I stared at a picture of a drink Beyonc? had while on vacation.

?She?s not going to say something.?

Election Day came and went without a word from the world?s most famous Houstonian, and HERO ended up losing badly at the ballot box, stripping basic legal protections for LGBT people in Houston.

Watching HERO lose is probably one of hardest things I?ve had to experience in my work as an activist. My colleagues, my friends in Houston had fought tooth and nail to protect their non-discrimination ordinance. I remembered how excited they had been when the #BeyBeAHERO campaign launched, how energized they were by the prospect that Beyonc? might lend them a helping hand.

But last night, they could only be devastated by a massive setback in their fight to live free from discrimination.

On Instagram, I watched a video of Beyonc? posing silently in front of an American flag.

?I can?t believe she didn?t say something.?

In September, The New York Times and Daily Beast argued that Beyonc??s brand is defined by a kind of intentional silence: refusing to make any public statements that might stray from her highly micromanaged PR strategy.

Last night, staring numbly as election returns rolled in, I thought about Beyonc??s refusal to utter a word in defense of her hometown?s non-discrimination ordinance. I thought about the disconnect between her brand, which has thus far suggested a kind of vague support for the LGBT community, and  the impulse to stay out of public battles when the stakes are high.

The few times Beyonc? has chosen to express support for the LGBT community, she?s avoided offering more than vague, kind sentiments about the need for equality. She waited to tweet about California?s Proposition 8 until the measure was being handled by the Supreme Court, firmly out of the hands of voters who might be swayed by her position. She waited nearly a full week before posting a video celebrating the Supreme Court?s marriage equality decision this year. In both cases, she avoided taking a position that might make her a target in a public controversy.

HERO was different. With HERO, Beyonc? had a golden opportunity to oppose an active effort to legalize discrimination against LGBT Houstonians. It wouldn?t have taken more than a single Instagram post, but she would have inserted herself as a real, active ally, proving her support for the LGBT community is more than mere lip service.

She didn?t.

No celebrity is obligated to weigh in on social issues. Beyonc? is one of the most powerful women in the world, and she doesn?t owe her voice, her influence, to anyone but herself. Being an artist doesn?t require someone to also be a social justice warrior, and Beyonc? is entitled to avoid political disputes in the name of protecting her public brand.

But at least part of that brand has thus far suggested her support for the LGBT community. HERO offered her an incredibly simple opportunity to demonstrate that support when her fans and her hometown needed her the most.

HERO is gone, now. And for her queer fans who watched and waited while Beyonc? decided it wasn?t in her brand?s interests to speak out in defense of her hometown?s non-discrimination law, all there?s left to do is ask ?why not??

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/carlos-maza/beyonce-ignored-the-lgbt_b_8474620.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000050
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Plank on November 07, 2015, 03:06:45 PM
VVVVVVVvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvd
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: LOONA. on November 07, 2015, 03:07:49 PM
b
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Plank on November 07, 2015, 03:09:01 PM
QuoteIt kills me to write this post. I have spent more time worshiping Beyonc? than just about any other pop star. I've spent countless hours dancing to "Grown Woman" alone in my apartment. I've been the only guy in a dance class aimed at teaching the "Single Ladies" dance, and I loved every second of it. Beyonc? has been queen in my life since the first time I watched the "Crazy In Love" video.

dddddc

hmph
sound like this chile created tha prolem themselves!

i wish tha gurls would stop worshippin humans

plus its widely known tht katy is tha onl' gurl who rlly care 'bout ppl!  :supluv:
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: BAPHOMET. on November 07, 2015, 03:10:42 PM
p
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Plank on November 07, 2015, 03:10:46 PM
QuoteSo I did what any god-fearing gay man does in his time of need. I turned to Beyonc?.


GBNnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnf

i jus drop these estrogen pills
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Nine on November 07, 2015, 03:10:49 PM
n
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Bentley! on November 07, 2015, 03:11:56 PM
Quote from: Plank-san on November 07, 2015, 03:10:46 PM
QuoteSo I did what any god-fearing gay man does in his time of need. I turned to Beyonc?.


GBNnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnf

i jus drop these estrogen pills
ssssssssssssssss
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Nine on November 07, 2015, 03:12:05 PM
QuoteNo celebrity is obligated to weigh in on social issues. Beyonc? is one of the most powerful women in the world, and she doesn?t owe her voice, her influence, to anyone but herself. Being an artist doesn?t require someone to also be a social justice warrior, and Beyonc? is entitled to avoid political disputes in the name of protecting her public brand.
Coulda just ended it here tbh

:letsmessfag:
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Almost on November 07, 2015, 03:14:16 PM
QuoteOn Instagram, I watched Beyonc? post a photo of a pizza.

?Why hasn?t she said something??

sssggghd
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Bentley! on November 07, 2015, 03:14:53 PM
Quote from: Almost on November 07, 2015, 03:14:16 PM
QuoteOn Instagram, I watched Beyonc? post a photo of a pizza.

?Why hasn?t she said something??

sssggghd
:ack: :ack: :ack: :ack: :ack: :ack: :ack:
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Herb. on November 07, 2015, 03:15:20 PM
Quote from: MΛΥDΛΥ on November 07, 2015, 03:06:13 PM
QuoteIt kills me to write this post. I have spent more time worshiping Beyonc? than just about any other pop star. I've spent countless hours dancing to "Grown Woman" alone in my apartment. I've been the only guy in a dance class aimed at teaching the "Single Ladies" dance, and I loved every second of it. Beyonc? has been queen in my life since the first time I watched the "Crazy In Love" video.

But.

Over the past few months, Beyonc? has repeatedly refused the opportunity to speak out against the legalization of discrimination against LGBT people in her hometown. And as hard as it is to say this, her refusal should raise serious questions about her support for her gay, bisexual and transgender fans.

Last night Houstonians voted to repeal the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance (HERO), a city ordinance prohibiting discrimination on the basis of 15 different characteristics, including race, sex, disability, sexual orientation and gender identity. HERO?s repeal is likely the biggest setback for LGBT civil rights since the 2008 passage of Prop 8 in California.

In August, I found out that HERO would be going up for a public repeal vote, and my stomach turned. Laws like HERO tend to lose, badly, when they?re put up for a public vote. I thought about my friends in Houston -- activists I had worked with on HERO for months, people who had dedicated their work, their free time, and their emotional energy to ending discrimination in their hometown. I imagined watching their hard work erased at the ballot box. I imagined having to sit through another expensive, brutal campaign about whether it should be legal to discriminate against LGBT people. I wanted to help.

So I did what any god-fearing gay man does in his time of need. I turned to Beyonc?.

In August, I wrote a blog asking Beyonc? to make a single Instagram post in support of HERO. My decision to focus on Beyonc? wasn?t random. She?s spoken supportively about the LGBT community before. She?s occasionally chosen to use her Instagram account to take positions on social issues. She?s the world?s most famous Houstonian -- the ?Visit Houston? website has a page dedicated to Beyonc?, who said ?this will always be home to me!? And with fifty million followers, she has one of the most influential social media presences in the world. A single post from her would have motivated young voters to the polls, focused national attention on the fight over HERO, and dramatically reframed the narrative away from the talking points of HERO?s opponents, who ended up saturating media coverage of the ordinance.

To my surprise, a group of young Houston activists turn the post into a fully-fledged online campaign. Before I knew it, HERO supporters in Houston were using the hashtag #BeyBeAHERO to urge Beyonc? to back the ordinance on social media. During a time when many LGBT activists would have been groaning about the prospect of a public vote, there was a kind of electricity surrounding the idea that a scrappy group of Houstonians might be able to convince the world?s biggest pop star to help them protect the ordinance they had fought so hard for.

The campaign garnered the attention of local and national media outlets including NBC, Buzzfeed, Vox, Salon, Upworthy, Houston Chronicle, and Texas Monthly. Major LGBT organizations, including GLAAD, Courage Campaign, and the National LGBTQ Task Force joined in asking for the superstar?s help. Even Sylvester Turner, the leading Democratic mayoral candidate in Houston, launched a petition asking Beyonc? to back the ordinance.

But despite repeated requests for help from HERO supporters in Houston, Beyonc? declined to comment.

On Instagram, I watched her post images from her Vogue cover shoot.

?It?s only August. I?m sure she?ll say something.?

As the fight over HERO continued, opponents flooded the airwaves with ads falsely claiming that HERO would endanger women by letting men into public restrooms ? a scare tactic that?s proven incredibly successful at eroding support for non-discrimination laws. HERO supporters worked to gather endorsements from businesses and faith leaders, including Beyonc??s pastor, who spoke strongly in favor of the ordinance. Early polling showed that, while supporters had a slight advantage, the vote would be close.

The drumbeat for Beyonc? to speak up in defense of HERO continued. Two weeks into the #BeyBeAHERO campaign, the hashtag had made over 10 million impressions on social media.

But still, nothing.

One night, I found myself lying on the grass in a park by my apartment, distraught. I had done everything I knew how to do to get Beyonc??s team to react. I had bugged every reporter friend, forwarded every press hit, tweeted incessantly. I had given it my best shot. And I was starting to feel like a failure.

On Instagram, I watched Beyonc? post a photo of a pizza.

?Why hasn?t she said something??

Early voting began on October 19. A number of Houston celebrities, including Matt Bomer and Jim Parsons, came out in support of the ordinance. Even Hillary Clinton tweeted her support for HERO, urging voters to vote for the measure and oppose discrimination.

But despite those endorsements, young voters, who were expected to support HERO, weren?t turning out for early voting. Supporters worried that the low turnout among young Houstonians could spell doom for non-discrimination measure on Election Day.

Behind the scenes, activists again urged Beyonc??s team to post something, anything voicing her opposition to anti-LGBT discrimination and encouraging Houstonians to keep HERO.

On Instagram, I stared at a picture of a drink Beyonc? had while on vacation.

?She?s not going to say something.?

Election Day came and went without a word from the world?s most famous Houstonian, and HERO ended up losing badly at the ballot box, stripping basic legal protections for LGBT people in Houston.

Watching HERO lose is probably one of hardest things I?ve had to experience in my work as an activist. My colleagues, my friends in Houston had fought tooth and nail to protect their non-discrimination ordinance. I remembered how excited they had been when the #BeyBeAHERO campaign launched, how energized they were by the prospect that Beyonc? might lend them a helping hand.

But last night, they could only be devastated by a massive setback in their fight to live free from discrimination.

On Instagram, I watched a video of Beyonc? posing silently in front of an American flag.

?I can?t believe she didn?t say something.?

In September, The New York Times and Daily Beast argued that Beyonc??s brand is defined by a kind of intentional silence: refusing to make any public statements that might stray from her highly micromanaged PR strategy.

Last night, staring numbly as election returns rolled in, I thought about Beyonc??s refusal to utter a word in defense of her hometown?s non-discrimination ordinance. I thought about the disconnect between her brand, which has thus far suggested a kind of vague support for the LGBT community, and  the impulse to stay out of public battles when the stakes are high.

The few times Beyonc? has chosen to express support for the LGBT community, she?s avoided offering more than vague, kind sentiments about the need for equality. She waited to tweet about California?s Proposition 8 until the measure was being handled by the Supreme Court, firmly out of the hands of voters who might be swayed by her position. She waited nearly a full week before posting a video celebrating the Supreme Court?s marriage equality decision this year. In both cases, she avoided taking a position that might make her a target in a public controversy.

HERO was different. With HERO, Beyonc? had a golden opportunity to oppose an active effort to legalize discrimination against LGBT Houstonians. It wouldn?t have taken more than a single Instagram post, but she would have inserted herself as a real, active ally, proving her support for the LGBT community is more than mere lip service.

She didn?t.

No celebrity is obligated to weigh in on social issues. Beyonc? is one of the most powerful women in the world, and she doesn?t owe her voice, her influence, to anyone but herself. Being an artist doesn?t require someone to also be a social justice warrior, and Beyonc? is entitled to avoid political disputes in the name of protecting her public brand.

But at least part of that brand has thus far suggested her support for the LGBT community. HERO offered her an incredibly simple opportunity to demonstrate that support when her fans and her hometown needed her the most.

HERO is gone, now. And for her queer fans who watched and waited while Beyonc? decided it wasn?t in her brand?s interests to speak out in defense of her hometown?s non-discrimination law, all there?s left to do is ask ?why not??

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/carlos-maza/beyonce-ignored-the-lgbt_b_8474620.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000050
n
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: SUPREME on November 07, 2015, 03:15:37 PM
CCVVNHBBBVVVV
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: SUPREME on November 07, 2015, 03:16:08 PM
Yeah cause bey has been a political activist

Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: BigDawg on November 07, 2015, 03:16:16 PM
This novel
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Nine on November 07, 2015, 03:17:37 PM
Quote from: Almost on November 07, 2015, 03:14:16 PM
QuoteOn Instagram, I watched Beyonc? post a photo of a pizza.

?Why hasn?t she said something??

sssggghd
:plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :kii:
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: BAPHOMET. on November 07, 2015, 03:18:28 PM
Quote from: Almost on November 07, 2015, 03:14:16 PM
QuoteOn Instagram, I watched Beyonc? post a photo of a pizza.

?Why hasn?t she said something??

sssggghd

:loose2when: not fuming while she's eating.
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: RekeRig on November 07, 2015, 03:18:47 PM
fcdsssssdddd not Bey posting about chicken fingers while he's laid out sobbing somewhere

(http://i.imgur.com/gKXlOSe.gif)
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Plank on November 07, 2015, 03:20:14 PM
SDFCGBHNMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Bentley! on November 07, 2015, 03:22:17 PM
is she admitting she's a lesbian here?
:diddraispoot:
(http://elixher.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/beyoncesamesexmarriage.jpg)
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: yummy on November 07, 2015, 03:22:25 PM
QuoteI've spent countless hours dancing to "Grown Woman" alone in my apartment. I've been the only guy in a dance class aimed at teaching the "Single Ladies" dance

AEWTTVBKKMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM

can't make it past this part guys
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Bentley! on November 07, 2015, 03:23:31 PM
Quote from: ANIMMAI on November 07, 2015, 03:22:25 PM
QuoteI've spent countless hours dancing to "Grown Woman" alone in my apartment. I've been the only guy in a dance class aimed at teaching the "Single Ladies" dance

AEWTTVBKKMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM

can't make it past this part guys
:kii: :kii: :kii: :kii: :kii: :kii: :kii: :kii: :kii: :kii: :kii:
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: CHOKE on November 07, 2015, 03:23:54 PM
If she did say anything the fags would say she's using them for publicity like Gags.

(http://i.imgur.com/ZgqtaFD.gif)
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Admin on November 07, 2015, 04:25:16 PM
Quote from: Bentley! on November 07, 2015, 03:11:56 PM
Quote from: Plank-san on November 07, 2015, 03:10:46 PM
QuoteSo I did what any god-fearing gay man does in his time of need. I turned to Beyonc?.


GBNnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnf

i jus drop these estrogen pills
ssssssssssssssss
:kii:
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: RAY7 on November 07, 2015, 04:29:01 PM
did anyone get through the whole thing?
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: GLOCK on November 07, 2015, 05:03:20 PM
Quote from: squid on November 07, 2015, 04:25:16 PM
Quote from: Bentley! on November 07, 2015, 03:11:56 PM
Quote from: Plank-san on November 07, 2015, 03:10:46 PM
QuoteSo I did what any god-fearing gay man does in his time of need. I turned to Beyonc?.


GBNnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnf

i jus drop these estrogen pills
ssssssssssssssss
:kii:
ZXXXXBNNNNNNCCBNNNN
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: Genesis on November 07, 2015, 05:54:26 PM
She's an entertainer, not a humanitarian

If he wanted help seek an activist who works in that field :uhh:
Title: Re: Beyonc? Ignored the LGBT Community in Houston
Post by: MelMel on November 07, 2015, 05:56:46 PM
Quote from: ANIMMAI on November 07, 2015, 03:22:25 PM
QuoteI've spent countless hours dancing to "Grown Woman" alone in my apartment. I've been the only guy in a dance class aimed at teaching the "Single Ladies" dance

AEWTTVBKKMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM

can't make it past this part guys

:plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: