National/Federal Know Your Rights - Page 45 of 59 - GLAD Law
跳過標題到內容
GLAD Logo 跳過主導航到內容

部落格

As you all know, the courts – as the independent third branch of government – play a pivotal role in protecting the rights of all citizens, particularly protecting unpopular minorities from what can be the “tyranny of the majority.” GLAD does much of our work in the courts, including the United States Supreme Court, where we have argued for marriage equality, the rights of people living with HIV, the rights of LGBTQ parents and, most basically, the right of LGBTQ people and people living with HIV to be treated with equal dignity.

As a result, we must also fight to protect and defend the integrity of the courts and help to ensure that they remain open to all on equal terms. Every litigant must receive a fair and impartial hearing, confident that the judges they appear before are committed to the rule of law, which includes upholding the Constitution’s guarantees of liberty, dignity and equal protection for everyone.

This is vitally important at the United States Supreme Court, the final interpreter of the meaning of federal laws and our federal Constitution.  And it is for this reason that we call on the Senate to very carefully vet Judge Neil Gorsuch, President Trump’s nominee to the Supreme Court, to determine if he is truly prepared to protect the vital guarantees of all.

Here at GLAD, we have serious concerns as to whether Judge Gorsuch meets that standard. In Druley v. Patton, 601 Fed. App’x 632 (10 Cir. 2015), Judge Gorsuch joined an opinion that dismissed the claims of a transgender prisoner, who asserted that her constitutional rights were violated when prison officials started and stopped her hormone therapy numerous times over 27 years and currently provided an inadequate dosage.

Relying on a 30-year-old decision, these judges – in 2015 – simply declined to recognize a right to hormone therapy for inmates with “GID.”  On her equal protection claims, about clothing and about being housed in an all-male facility, the court baldly declared that the prison had acted rationally and that “a transsexual plaintiff” is not part of a protected class entitled to heightened scrutiny by the court of state action.

We are also concerned about religious liberty and about how novel claims concerning the free exercise of religion can be asserted to inflict great harm on the LGBTQ community and women – something that is contrary to settled law that correctly respects citizens’ religious beliefs so long as they do no harm to others.

In the now famous (or infamous) Hobby Lobby case, the Supreme Court held that a closely-held corporation could actually assert a claim that its religious beliefs should exempt it from a portion of the Affordable Care Act’s requirements around contraceptive coverage.  Prior to the Supreme Court, that case had been in Judge Gorsuch’s court, which had ruled in favor of the corporation.  Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. v. Sebelius, 723 F.3d 1114 (10 Cir. 2013).  There, Judge Gorsuch wrote a concurring opinion to argue essentially that a court cannot challenge a person’s faith belief that a particular act makes them complicit in conduct which they do not condone and, therefore, excuses their actions.  Imagine how this elastic concept of complicity (bear in mind that religious organizations have been claiming that it is complicit in sin for them even to submit a paper to the government indicating that they claim their right to an exemption from the ACA’s contraceptive coverage mandate) could impact the LGBTQ community, e.g., in the provision of any kind of service to an LGBTQ individual.

On a somewhat broader note, many important legal protections – such as the right to use contraceptives, to have an abortion, to engage in sexual intimacy and to legally marry the person you love – are ground in notions of privacy, autonomy and the dignity of the person that the Supreme Court has held are protected by the Constitution – under a doctrine called substantive due process.  Well, Judge Gorsuch has shown skepticism about this whole area of jurisprudence.  See Browder v. City of Albuquerque, 787 F.3d 1076, 1078 (10 Cir. 2015).  And, in this same area of the law, he has written extensively about assisted suicide and euthanasia, arguing that they can be prohibited as acts, “which, by definition, involve an intentional assault against the basic good of life,” which is sacrosanct.  Neil M. Gorsuch, The Right to Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia, 23 Harv. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 599, 701 (1999-2000).

Somewhat related, in mid-2015, the Governor of Utah sought to cut off all federal funding that passed through state hands to Planned Parenthood to run certain programs in the state.  Planned Parenthood sue and ultimately a three-judge panel of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit granted Planned Parenthood a preliminary injunction to prohibit the Governor from cutting off the funding.  The full Tenth Circuit then refused to rehear the case. Planned Parenthood Ass’n of Utah v. Herbert, 839 F.3d 1301 (10 Cir. 2016).  Judge Gorsuch dissented, arguing that a rehearing was warranted to allow the Governor to cut off funds.  ID。 at 1307.

Finally, in 2005, before he became a judge, Mr. Gorsuch wrote an essay in which he criticized “liberals” as having an “overweening addiction to the courtroom,” seeking to gain and preserve rights in the court rather than from voters and elected officials.  His examples were marriage equality (this was not long after GLAD’s 古德里奇 decision in Massachusetts), assisted suicide and school vouchers. Where and from whom have we heard the siren cry of complaint before?

It creates worrisome questions about Judge Gorsuch’s willingness to do the important work of the courts in protecting people’s fundamental rights.

The Senate needs to dig deep into this judge’s record and writings to see if he can be trusted with this high office of utmost importance to us all.

Where there’s this much smoke, is there likely to be fire?

部落格

GLAD is preparing to fight like hell.

Earlier this week, we saw a leaked draft of a possible Trump administration executive order on “Religious Freedom.” The order targets LGBTQ people, eviscerates women’s healthcare, privileges one religious viewpoint, and offers tax incentives to those who promote it.

It is nothing short of a far-reaching license to discriminate.

Freedom of religion is a cherished and fundamental right in the US, and it is rightly protected in the First Amendment of our Constitution. But that freedom does not include the right to discriminate.

Make no mistake: if this order is signed and its directives are allowed to stand, people will get hurt.

GLAD’s lawyers saw this coming, and are already strategizing about how to fight it.

We stand ready to go to court to protect the rights of LGBTQ people and our families, friends, and allies who would be hurt by this order.

Are you with us?

We know so many people of faith agree that freedom means freedom for all – not freedom to discriminate. But we have all seen the hateful tenor of the current administration and their campaign of divisiveness.

If a final executive order anything like this draft is signed, we will be ready to fight for all our lives, and all our freedom. But we need your help.

GLAD’s lawyers have a 40-year track record of defending and advancing equal justice under the law, from transgender rights, to marriage equality, to ensuring those with HIV can get the healthcare they need. They are strategic, smart, and experienced – and they are fired up.

We won’t give in to divisiveness – and we won’t go back. Give now to ensure that we can keep our laws on the right side of justice and true freedom for all. 

訊息

As legal organizations dedicated to securing the freedom and equality of LGBT persons through the courts, we call on the President to nominate, and the Senate to confirm, a new Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States who has a demonstrated commitment to the legal equality of the full diversity of LGBT people and their families, and who will honor past Supreme Court decisions recognizing that equality.

Our organizations have represented the plaintiffs in many cases before the Supreme Court that have firmly established the principle over the past 20 years that our Constitution requires equal treatment of LGBT persons under the law, including the freedom to marry.

Further, as organizations dedicated more broadly to our democracy’s fundamental promises of justice and equality, we call on the Senate to reject any nominee to the Court who does not clearly affirm a commitment to upholding the Constitution’s guarantees of liberty and equal protection for all Americans.

Through strategic litigation, public policy advocacy, and education, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders works in New England and nationally to create a just society free of discrimination based on gender identity and expression, HIV status, and sexual orientation. www.gladlaw.org

Lambda Legal is a national organization committed to achieving full recognition of the civil rights of lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, transgender people and those with HIV through impact litigation, education and public policy work. www.lambdalegal.org

NCLR is a national legal organization committed to advancing the civil and human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people and their families through litigation, legislation, policy, and public education. www.nclrights.org

訊息

The President does not get to claim support for LGBTQ people simply by not rolling back an existing order on explicit non-discrimination protections. The records of those the President has surrounded himself with and appointed to his cabinet, from Attorney General nominee Jeff Sessions to Secretary of Education nominee Betsy DeVos, paint a different picture of where the administration stands on LGBTQ equality.

Furthermore, LGBTQ people are in every community, and we stand in solidarity with other marginalized groups, including immigrants, Muslims, women, and people of color who have already been the targets of attack by this administration. We will stay vigilant against discrimination on all fronts, and we will not be divided.

部落格

當我得知華盛頓婦女遊行是在星期六時,我必須做出一個重要的選擇。

像許多其他猶太人一樣,我在安息日不工作。我喜歡安息日的習俗,因為它模仿了神在創造完美世界之後的休息日。因此,每週一次,我們有機會像世界完美無瑕一樣生活。彷彿我們透過過去一週的行動,已經足夠努力地讓世界變得完整,而在這一天,我們無需再勞動或做出改變。我們獲得了一次隱喻性的深呼吸,並有機會反思身邊的一切美好。

但猶太教也給了我們 皮庫阿赫·尼菲什認為保護人類生命的概念幾乎凌駕於任何其他宗教考量之上。當有人面臨直接威脅時,我們「不採取行動」的戒律就變得毫無意義。

於是我就遊行了。

當前的政治局勢以及我們新政府行動的威脅,對人們的生命構成了真實而明確的威脅。這並非理論上或歇斯底里的想像未來。而且,這與我們的猶太價值觀相違背。

我之所以採取行動,是因為本屆政府上台後已經表明,它不僅相信有些人比其他人更有人性或更值得尊重,而且已經開始製定基於這些歧視性信念的政策——這些政策將使人們失去生計、健康和生命。

《妥拉》堅稱我們要維護窮人的尊嚴,並努力為他們提供脫貧之路。然而,川普總統政府承諾的減稅措施將在未來十年內使聯邦收入減少超過146兆美元。專家表示,川普的「平衡」預算將使更多人陷入貧困:醫療補助(Medicaid)將縮減,兒童健康保險計劃(CHS)將縮減,補充營養援助計劃將被削減,對窮人的住房和能源援助將減少,等等。

我們的價值觀告訴我們,我們都是按照上帝的形象創造的,我們必須珍惜和保護所有人,而不僅僅是像我們這樣的人。然而,川普總統卻公開嘲笑一位手臂行動不便的殘障記者。他從whitehouse.gov網站上刪除了一個強調政府致力於為殘疾人提供教育和就業機會的網頁。住房和城市發展部擬任負責人認為,為跨性別者提供公平住房是一種「特殊待遇」。

川普總統誓言要強制穆斯林登記,並暗中煽動全國針對伊斯蘭社群的暴力行為。總統高級顧問史蒂夫·班農曾擔任新聞網站「布賴特巴特」的執行主席,班農稱該網站為「另類右翼之家」——白人至上主義者和新納粹分子的代名詞。而現任美國司法部長候選人傑夫·塞申斯則以發表種族主義言論和政策而聞名,他曾開玩笑說自己沒有加入三K黨,「因為該組織成員吸食大麻」。

拉比莎倫·布魯斯說:「我們的子孫有一天會問我們:當我們的國家被推入煽動和分裂的獅子窩時,你們在哪裡?我們會說:我懷著愛站在那裡。我懷著希望站在那裡。我與所有宗教、種族、性別和性取向的兄弟姐妹們站在一起,堅持我們終將走出黑暗,沐浴在一個無限榮耀的所有榮耀中的價值。」

我遊行並非像某些人指責的那樣,只是因為「我支持的候選人輸了」。我之所以採取行動,是因為上台的政府不僅已經表明,它相信有些人比其他人更有人性或更值得尊重,而且已經開始製定基於這些歧視性信念的政策——這些政策將使人們失去生計、健康和生命。

在阿拉巴馬州塞爾瑪與馬丁路德金牧師一起遊行後,拉比亞伯拉罕約書亞赫舍爾說:「我感覺我的雙腳在祈禱。」我理解這種感覺。在安息日遊行——為所有人的權利和尊嚴而戰——對我來說,是認識到我們每個人內心神聖火花、認識到我們拯救生命的神聖義務的最佳方式。

這場遊行激發了我的決心,我每天都會採取一項行動來對抗我們在政府最高層看到的偏見、仇恨和危及生命的政策:打電話給民選官員、寫信給不報道真相的新聞機構、為關鍵問題捐款、與認為投票不重要的人進行艱難的談話。

在華盛頓婦女遊行中,拉比莎倫·布魯斯說:「我們的子孫有一天會問我們:當我們的國家被推入煽動和分裂的獅子窩時,你們在哪裡?我們會說:我懷著愛站在那裡。我懷著希望站在那裡。我與所有宗教、種族、性別和性取向的兄弟姐妹們站在一起,堅持認為我們將走出黑暗,所有的光輝人民價值之光。

我的猶太教信仰根植於正義的價值觀。我致力於讓我的孩子在一個猶太社區和一個更廣闊的世界中成長,這個世界教會我們互相關愛,並在我們周圍的陌生人身上看到自我。但我知道,為了讓這個世界存在——為了讓這個猶太社區真實存在——我有責任站出來,大聲疾呼,創造我想要看到的現實。

部落格

While no one can do everything, everyone must do something.

My husband Adam’s great-grandfather owned a chocolate factory in Germany in the early 20th century. He travelled frequently, and gained a sophisticated perspective on what was happening in his own country. He came to believe that it wasn’t normal and that it was not safe for him, his wife and his child, who were Jewish. They escaped to Argentina, where Adam’s grandmother and mother grew up. Most of the rest of their family did not survive World War II. A man holding a sign at a rally reading We are all one justice movement Adam’s family history has always made him feel responsible to have an awareness of injustice, prejudice, and violence in the world. It has spurred him to humanitarian action as a doctor. One of his favorite quotes, by Dostoevsky, is engraved in the entry hall of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum in Geneva:
Everyone is responsible to everyone for everything.
I’ve thought about this quote a lot post-election, when people of good faith are concerned about our country’s future, and about the most vulnerable people among us. Yet, the scope and scale of what lies ahead can feel overwhelming. How much activism is enough? How much should we give? What can we possibly do that is useful? It is easy – and understandable – to feel powerless right now. But we do have power, and we’re obliged to resist. We can rest and restore when we need to – but we cannot retreat. To use another favorite quote of Adam’s, this time by Rabbi Tarfon:
It is not your responsibility to finish the work of perfecting the world, but you are not free to desist from it either.
While no one can do everything, everyone must do something. What is your “something? It helps to look at the tools we have at hand: elections; courts and the law; direct action; persuasion; and philanthropy. Elections matter, and there are elections in our immediate future – mid-term congressional elections, state level elections, and local elections – that will make a difference in our lives. Making our voices heard by voting and communicating with our elected officials is key to our democracy. There are ballot questions that will demand our attention, such as the attempt to repeal the hard-won Massachusetts transgender public accommodations bill in 2018. Courts have tremendous power to protect us and advance our rights, especially when legislatures are failing. Congress may be unlikely to pass the Equality Act, but we can continue to make progress in federal court – and in many state courts. Who sits on our courts matters, and we cannot stand by silently as they are packed with judges who do not interpret our laws and our Constitution to extend equal justice for all. There is a direct action through line from the suffragists chaining themselves to the White House fence, to Selma, ACT UP, and Black Lives Matter. Direct action can show those targeted they are not alone, as well as push our allies to do the right thing when there are competing forces. None of these tools are effective without public persuasion. It is only when we do the hard work of having face-to-face, nonjudgmental, empathetic conversations with reasonable people who disagree, that we help perfect our society. Finally, philanthropy is the fuel that allows non-profit organizations like GLAD to run at full speed. Adam and I recently reached our goal of giving 10% of our income to organizations whose missions and work we support, inspired by the Jewish concept of tithing. It wasn’t easy, it took some time, and it was a priority. These times call on all of us to determine what we are able to give to support the many organizations on the front lines in the fight ahead. We can’t do everything, but every one of us can do something. This is the way we take care of each other, and guard our future. Choose your something.

訊息

BOSTON, January 23, 2017 — Today, notice will be provided to class members in a $7.5 million settlement that has been reached with Walmart and Sam’s Club (together “Walmart”) in a class action lawsuit that challenged the lack of health insurance benefits for the same-sex spouses of associates between January 1, 2011 and December 31, 2013 (the “Settlement Class Period”). To receive payments under the Settlement, Settlement Class Members must file claims with the Settlement Administrator no later than March 20, 2017.

On December 22, 2016, the District Court presiding over the class action lawsuit granted preliminary approval of the Settlement, and directed the parties to send notice to Settlement Class Members so that they can learn about the Settlement and have the opportunity to submit claims to receive payments.

Walmart voluntarily began making the same Health Insurance benefits that it provides to opposite-sex spouses of its associates available to same-sex spouses of its associates as of January 1, 2014. Walmart denies it did anything wrong. The Court did not decide in favor of Plaintiff or Walmart. Instead, both sides agreed to a settlement.

“Settlement Class Members” include those individuals who, during the January 1, 2011 to December 31, 2013 Settlement Class Period, (1) worked at Walmart or Sam’s Club in the United States or Puerto Rico; (2) were legally married to a same-sex spouse; and (3) would have been eligible for spousal Health Insurance Benefits from Walmart or Sam’s Club but for the limitation on providing spousal Health Insurance Benefits to same-sex spouses.

Under the Settlement, Walmart has agreed to pay $7.5 million into a Settlement Fund. Up to $3.5 million of the Settlement Fund will be used to make payments to Settlement Class Members for certain documented out-of-pocket healthcare and/or health insurance costs incurred by their same-sex spouses during the Settlement Class Period. The remaining Settlement Fund, after deducting court-approved attorneys’ fees and expenses, a service award to the Named Plaintiff, and claims administration costs, will be used to make payments to Settlement Class Members who submit claims calculated based on the number of months they would have been eligible for spousal health insurance benefits during the Settlement Class Period. These “short form claimants” can receive a pro-rata share of the remaining funds based on the number of months they are eligible, up to $5,000 per year or up to $15,000 for the three year period. In addition, Walmart has committed to treating same-sex and opposite-sex spouses equally in providing health insurance benefits so long as to do so is consistent with applicable law.

To get a payment, Settlement Class Members must fill out and send in a Claim Form by March 20, 2017. Claim Forms and complete information about the Settlement are available at www.WalmartSameSexSpouseBenefitsSettlement.com.

If Settlement Class Members do nothing, their rights will be affected but they will not get a Settlement payment. Any Settlement Class Member who does not want to be legally bound by the Settlement must exclude themselves from it by March 20, 2017. Settlement Class Members who do not exclude themselves will not be able to sue or continue to sue Walmart for any legal claim resolved by this Settlement or released by the Settlement Agreement. Settlement Class Members who do not exclude themselves may object and notify the Court that they or their lawyer intends to appear at the Court’s Fairness Hearing. Objections are due March 20, 2017. More information is available at www.WalmartSameSexSpouseBenefitsSettlement.com.

Judge William Young will hold a final approval hearing in this case (Cote v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., No. 15-cv-12945-WGY) at 2:00 p.m. on May 11, 2017 at the John Joseph Moakley U.S. Courthouse, 1 Courthouse Way, Boston, MA 02210. At this hearing, the Court will decide whether to approve: the Settlement; Class Counsel’s request for attorneys’ fees (up to 25% of the Settlement Fund) and costs; and $25,000 as a service award to the Class Representative. Settlement Class Members or their lawyers may appear at the hearing at their own expense.

For more information visit www.WalmartSameSexSpouseBenefitsSettlement.com or call 1-877-241-7543.

訊息

Today, leading national LGBT advocates issued an urgent call for action on climate change, and announced their strong opposition to President-elect Trump’s nominee for the Environmental Protection Agency. Scott Pruitt’s confirmation hearing was held today before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee.

Nation’s Leading LGBT Advocates Call for Action on Climate, Oppose Nominee for Environmental Protection Agency

Every day we work to make life better for our lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender youth—to help families understand and support them, and to build safe and supportive schools and communities. But we are also deeply concerned about the physical world LGBT young people, and all the nation’s young people, will be inheriting—potentially one with more extreme droughts, dangerous heat waves, destructive floods, deadly storms, frightening diseases, and disappearing coastal communities. If we do not take decisive action now, these changes will gravely threaten our communities’ health, economic security, and their very safety in the years to come—and we are already seeing the effects today, all around the country and the world. No one can look at the decisive science and enormous implication of climate change and say “this is not my issue.”

It is against this backdrop that, advocates for LGBT communities, we must strongly oppose the nomination of Scott Pruitt for Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). As Oklahoma’s Attorney General, Pruitt has worked relentlessly to undermine the EPA’s mission of ensuring clean and safe air and water and protecting workers, consumers, and communities from potentially deadly environmental risks. Pruitt is a die-hard climate change denier who continues to traffic in lies about the science of energy and climate. As the New York Times reported in 2014, Pruitt has regularly allowed energy-industry lobbyists to draft his correspondence to federal officials.

Pruitt also has a long record of active opposition to LGBT people’s dignity and legal equality. He has denounced and tried to resist federal court rulings on the freedom to marry, and is helping spearhead a lawsuit seeking to ensure that transgender workers have no protection from workplace discrimination—yet as head of the EPA he would be responsible for ensuring equal employment opportunity at a major federal agency.

Climate change is likely the most serious issue facing us all in the years ahead and right now. We call on every single member of our communities to commit to civic action to prevent catastrophic climate change. We further call on President-elect Trump to withdraw the nomination of Scott Pruitt, and if he does not, we call on the Senate to reject him.

Co-signed:

CenterLink:LGBT中心社區

大聲相信

平等聯盟

家庭平等委員會

GLBTQ 法律倡議者和捍衛者 (GLAD)

移民平等

全國黑人正義聯盟

國家跨性別平等中心

全國女同性戀權利中心

全國 LGBTQ 工作小組

全國酷兒亞太島民聯盟

OutServe-SLDN

訊息

The Senate has a responsibility to consider Session’s record in weighing whether he should be confirmed for this important office. We agree that when they look to his record, particularly regarding people of color, immigrants, LGBTQ people, women and people with disabilities, they must agree he should not.

GLAD has joined The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and a coalition of over 600 national, state and local organizations in a letter expressing strong opposition to the confirmation of Senator Jeff Sessions as Attorney General.

“In our democracy, the Attorney General is charged with enforcing our nation’s laws without prejudice and with an eye toward justice.  And, just as important, the Attorney General has to be seen by the public – every member of the public, from every community – as a fair arbiter of justice.  Unfortunately, there is little in Senator Sessions’ record that demonstrates that he would meet such a standard.”

Read the letter.

部落格

The full, devastating impact of yesterday’s election is yet to be known, but I woke up this morning knowing that, first, we must take care of each other.

This is not business as usual. The rhetoric of racism, misogyny and Islamophobia that we endured during the campaign cannot become policy, and cannot become who we are. All of our collective efforts will be more vital than ever.

  • It will be more vital than ever to have the backs of the most vulnerable in our community, including people of color, youth, transgender people, , religious minorities, immigrants, and people with low incomes.
  • It will be more vital than ever to defend our Constitution and its bedrock promises of equality.
  • It will be more vital than ever to use all the tools at our disposal – litigation, advocacy, and dialogue on the local and national level – to safeguard the gains of the last 50 years, since the beginning of the modern civil rights movements.
  • It will be more vital than ever to reach out to every American of good will to come together as one justice movement..

GLAD is not going anywhere. We are here, and we will continue fighting like hell for all of us.

Our community has been through extremely hard times before, and every time, our community has stepped up – because we are resilient, we are brave, and we are strong. We will continue to move forward, together, to fight for justice for all.

zh_HK香港中文
隱私概述

本網站使用 Cookie,以便我們為您提供最佳的使用者體驗。 Cookie 資訊儲存在您的瀏覽器中,並執行諸如在您返回我們的網站時識別您的身份,以及幫助我們的團隊了解您認為網站中哪些部分最有趣和最實用等功能。