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奧帕爾李,六月節的祖母

部落客 里卡多·馬丁內斯,GLAD Law執行董事(他/他)

在極度掙扎的時刻,我傾向於內省。我確信這是一種防禦機制,保護我免受焦慮、壓力、理性思考、悲傷和痛苦的侵擾。在寧靜、莊嚴的沉思中,我尋求靈感,將我從世界拋給我的挑戰、失望和背叛中拉回來。  

昨天, 令人心碎 斯克爾梅蒂 決定 消息公佈後,我需要時間整理思緒,注意身體的反應,並深入挖掘以確認儘管我們經歷了損失,但我不會“以勝利為前提的戰鬥」  

這次激勵我重新振作的催化劑是 Opal Lee。 她被稱為「六月節的祖母」。她是德州人(出生於馬歇爾小鎮),退休教師,國家六月節紀念基金會(NJOF)董事會成員,也是組織者。 

幾十年來,她一直倡導將六月節定為聯邦假日。早在2016年,88歲的她就開始每年步行2.5英里,以吸引更多公眾關注這項事業。步行的長度象徵著解放黑人的消息傳到德州花了兩年半的時間。同時,她發起了一項請願活動,以表達公眾對將六月節定為節日的支持。一年後的2017年,奧帕爾步行1400英里到達華盛頓特區,向國會遞交了150萬個支持六月節的簽名。  

奧帕爾曾形容自己是一位「穿著網球鞋、愛管閒事的小老太太」。但事實上,她的努力和影響力已廣為人知。她以耐心、創造力、歷史視角和個人魅力為特徵的行事方式,激勵了德州人。 她有一個新穎的想法,投入了時間和愛,並倡導美國建立的原則:自由。 她的訊息簡潔有效,引領她一路走到白宮。 2021年6月17日,拜登總統簽署了《六月節國家獨立日法案》,將六月節定為聯邦假日。她的成功並非一蹴可幾。 

那麼,奧帕爾李是如何讓我從沉思中回過神來的呢?我專注於她的故事給我的啟示。 

  1. 痛苦的過去可以激發強大的未來: 1939年6月19日,一群白人至上主義者燒毀了她的房子,當時她12歲。她沒有讓這段痛苦的經歷成為她倡導的障礙,而是專注於重新定義這個日子,以幫助人們團結起來,並理解六月節的重要性。
  2. 堅韌、毅力和創造力具有創造改變的力量: 雖然我們確實面臨挫折,但這絕非故事的結局。我們將繼續前行,不斷完善具體策略,並制定創新策略,激勵人們創造有意義且永續的變革。潮流能夠、也終將逆轉。
  3. 我們一起完成的工作比分開完成的多很多: 奧帕爾李一直說,除非我們所有人都獲得自由,否則我們誰也無法獲得自由。李女士並非在宣揚陳腔濫調;她堅信這一點。她深知社區的力量。我們也一樣。我們是一個更大整體的一部分——並且像我們所有的社會正義夥伴一樣,我們在各自的專業領域為這個集體做出貢獻——以戰略性的方式齊心協力,守護這個國家最美好的事物——包括我們相互交織、多面的身份認同。

奧帕爾李的毅力、堅韌和愛的表達提醒我,無論遇到什麼挫折,我們都必須堅定不移地致力於實現正義和平等。 

除了她的倡議教給我的教訓之外,今天我們慶祝六月節時還有很多值得反思的地方。  

在最後一批被奴役的非洲祖先獲得自由的那一天,他們被承諾享有廣泛的權利(即所謂的十二項自由)。然而,這些權利,例如人身自由、受教育權、法律保護權、遷徙自由、醫療保健權,對美國黑人來說並非始終如一,如今,像跨性別者這樣的邊緣群體也同樣被剝奪了。  

在我們為斯克爾梅蒂案的判決感到悲痛的同時,也讓我們認識到美國黑人長期以來所遭受的不平等。讓我們也承認,我們的鬥爭密不可分。讓我們也慶祝我們的韌性、毅力、過去的勝利和經驗教訓。  

這場戰鬥遠未結束。我們的力量無比強大。正如奧帕爾所說:“每個人都有自己的角色。” 

了解更多關於 Opal Lee 在德克薩斯州沃斯堡的遺產, 這段關於她一生事業的視頻 以及國家六月節博物館的未來。 

部落格

A case currently before the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals could lead to tens of thousands of new and preventable HIV cases.

photo of white prescription bottle and several blue pills on an aqua background

HIV PrEP (Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis) is an extraordinary medical breakthrough that reduces the risk of HIV transmission by close to one hundred percent. Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), insurers are required to cover PrEP and other critical preventive care services without charging copays or deductibles, referred to as cost sharing. Last spring, however, a federal district judge in Texas issued a ruling in 布雷德伍德訴貝塞拉 blocking that requirement.

GLAD, with law firm Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky, and Popeo, P.C., filed a 法庭之友陳述 in the appeal of the 布雷德伍德 ruling at the Fifth Circuit on behalf of HIV Medicine Association (HMA) and the National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors (NASTAD).

HMA and NASTAD represent thousands of healthcare providers, public officials responsible for stopping the epidemic from every state, and policy experts with expertise in the treatment and prevention of HIV and the demographics and dynamics of the epidemic.

In their brief the organizations issue a dire warning: reinstating cost sharing for PrEP will significantly decrease utilization of PrEP, cause tens of thousands of new and preventable HIV cases, with billions of dollars in associated healthcare costs, and reverse the progress our nation has made towards curbing, and ultimately ending, the HIV epidemic.

“As an organization representing thousands of physicians and other health care professionals working on the frontlines of the HIV epidemic in communities across the country, we are deeply concerned about the harmful and far-reaching impacts this decision will have if allowed to stand,” said Michelle Cespedes, MD, MS, Chair, HIVMA. 

The brief analyzes the consequences of a recent epidemiological analysis conducted by experts at Harvard and Yale predicting, under the most cautious and conservative estimates, that blocking the ACA’s no cost sharing provision for PrEP will result in an additional 2,057 HIV infections in the first year alone.

Playing out the study’s straightforward assessment of additional first-year HIV diagnoses,  an additional predicted 1,892 secondary infections bring that number to 3,949 people with HIV in just the first year, which will cost the healthcare system a staggering $1.66 billion.

Extending that conservative model just five years into the future predicts approximately an additional 20,000 people with HIV and costs to the United States healthcare system of over $8 billion as a result of the reimposition of barriers to accessing PrEP.

The brief also provides the Court of Appeals with important historical and current-day information about the tremendous toll the HIV epidemic has had on millions of lives, as well as the role discrimination and stigma have played in preventing Americans from accessing highly effective prevention and treatment. While the ruling from the Texas court broadly enjoined the cost-sharing mandate for all recommended preventive services, the case began as a challenge specifically to the requirement to cover PrEP without copays or deductibles.

“The 布雷德伍德 decision is rooted in stigma and bigotry towards the LGBTQ+ community and people vulnerable to HIV,” said Dr. Stephen Lee, NASTAD Executive Director. “It will cause incalculable harm to our efforts to end the HIV epidemic.” 

Urging the Court of Appeals to understand the devastating consequences for HIV prevention if the District Court’s decision stands, the brief also describes the sobering and unacceptable racial/ethnic and geographic disparities in both the epidemic’s impact and access to PrEP. The most recent CDC estimates from 2021 are that only 11% of Black people and 20% of Hispanic/Latino people who could benefit from PrEP were prescribed it, as opposed to 78% of White people.

“Copays and deductibles deter people from accessing healthcare,” said Ben Klein, Senior Director of Litigation and HIV Law at GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders. “PrEP is nearly 100% effective at preventing transmission of HIV, but it is already underutilized, particularly among Black and Latino communities. Allowing the lower court’s ruling in 布雷德伍德訴貝塞拉 to stand will exacerbate racial health disparities, needlessly increase HIV diagnoses, and cost American lives.”

As we await a ruling from the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, GLAD is advocating for other approaches to protect and expand access to PrEP. State legislatures have the power to not only codify the ACA’s no cost-sharing requirement under state law, but to go further by ensuring all forms of PrEP, including long-acting injectables, are available to all who can benefit from them. Barriers like co-pays, deductibles, and insurance pre-authorization requirements mean delays in access to PrEP that can lead to avoidable HIV infections with serious health consequences and even death.  

PrEP offers us a powerful path to finally end the HIV epidemic. We only need the will, and good health policy, to embrace it.

這個故事最初發表在 2023 年秋季 GLAD Briefs 時事通訊中。 閱讀更多.

Learn more about GLAD’s work to expand access to PrEP.

Pidgeon v. Turner

Update December 4, 2017:  Today the U.S. Supreme Court denied the petition for review, and the case will continue through the Texas court.

Update October 20, 2017: GLAD and NCLR submitted an amicus brief requesting the Court grant cert in this case.

The Texas State Supreme Court issued its ruling June 30, 2017, in Pidgeon v. Turner, in which petitioners have challenged the City of Houston’s provision of benefits to the same-sex spouses of city employees. The court vacated a trial court injunction which would have barred the City from providing the benefits. But the court also sent the case – which dates to before the 2015 U.S. Supreme Court marriage equality ruling in 奧貝格費爾訴霍奇斯案 – back to the trial court to consider whether 奧貝格費爾 settles the question of the City’s power to issue the benefits. This overly cautious, technical approach ignores the obvious and only correct result of this litigation.

Mary L. Bonauto, Civil Rights Project Director for GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), who argued 奧貝格費爾 before the U.S. Supreme Court, issued the following statement:

“While the immediate and, I am confident, eventual final result here is that married same-sex couples in Houston and throughout Texas will continue to receive the equal treatment – including equal access to spousal benefits – the U.S. Constitution guarantees them, I am profoundly disappointed that the Texas Supreme Court did not take the opportunity it had today to resolve this case once and for all.

“The U.S. Supreme Court in 奧貝格費爾 unambiguously recognized the fundamental and equal right to marry for same-sex couples nationwide, together with access to all the same legal rights, benefits and responsibilities associated with marriage without discrimination – a recognition the Court, in fact, just re-affirmed this week in 帕萬訴史密斯. For the Texas court to leave open the possibility that 奧貝格費爾 could be read otherwise is, plainly, wrong.”

閱讀更多

背景

GLAD, Lambda Legal, the National Center for LGBTQ Rights, the ACLU of Texas and the ACLU foundation submitted an amicus brief in Pidgeon v. Turner, a case that went before the Texas Supreme Court challenging the City of Houston’s provision of benefits to married same-sex couples.

The brief argues that this matter was settled by the U.S. Supreme Court in its 2015 ruling in 奧貝格費爾, which clearly stated that same-sex couples must be granted access to marriage on the same terms as different-sex couples, including the same legal rights, benefits and responsibilities.

Whole Women’s Health v. Cole

On June 27, 2016 the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the draconian restrictions that the state of Texas had imposed on abortion providers in 2013.

GLAD and a coalition of 13 other LGBT, racial justice, and health equity organizations filed an amicus brief in Whole Woman’s Health v. Cole asking the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down draconian restrictions on abortion providers enacted by the State of Texas in 2013. If upheld, the restrictions would have led to the closing of most abortion clinics in the state.

The brief urged the Court to carefully scrutinize the state’s asserted justification for the law, as the Court has done with other laws that infringe upon fundamental freedoms. The State of Texas has argued that the law protects the health of women seeking abortion, but the evidence at trial showed just the opposite. Medical organizations such as the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American Medical Association, and the American Public Health Association have explained that the restrictions imposed by the new law are medically unnecessary and endanger, rather than advance, women’s health.

Pseudo-science has been used throughout American history to exclude individuals and groups from the full protection of essential constitutional liberties, including laws barring interracial marriage, excluding women from certain professions, permitting the forced sterilization of those deemed “inferior,” and criminalizing and discriminating against LGBT people. GLAD and its fellow amici urge the Court to look to this history and fulfill its constitutional obligation to examine carefully the State’s asserted justifications for restricting women’s fundamental right to reproductive autonomy.

In addition to GLAD, the organizations filing the brief are the National Center for LGBTQ Rights, the Equal Justice Society, the National Black Justice Coalition, the Family Equality Council, the Human Rights Campaign, the National LGBTQ Task Force, GLMA: Health Professionals Advancing LGBT Equality, Equality Federation, the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States, Immigration Equality, the National Health Law Program, Movement Advancement Project, and Bay Area Lawyers for Individual Freedom.

Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin et al

June 23, 2016: Victory! The Supreme Court has ruled 4-3 that the UT Austin race-conscious admissions program in question is lawful under the Equal Protection Clause.

GLAD joined the National Women’s Law Center, Lambda Legal and allied organizations in filing a friend-of-the-court brief in this case before the U.S. Supreme Court concerning the consideration of race in undergraduate admissions decisions.

The brief argues that racial and ethnic disparities can be diminished when stereotypes are confronted by reality – the daily contacts and differing perspectives offered by students of varying backgrounds. The brief focuses on women and LGBT persons of color, asserting that the cause of eradicating discrimination on the basis of sex, gender, sexual orientation and gender identity “is closely aligned with the interest in eliminating race discrimination” and that “successfully breaking down one form of discrimination tends to reduce others as well.”

閱讀更多

Mayer Brown LLP is lead counsel on the brief.

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