Wednesday, January 16, 2008

It's an honour just to be nominated: Canadian Blog Awards 2007

This blog has been nominated in two categories for the 2007 Canadian Blog Awards: Best New Blog and Best GLBT Blog. Voting in the first round takes place this week.

Let me just send a friendly shout-out to my friend Montreal Simon, who had some nice things to say about me and the other nominees in our Best GLBT Blog category today. I've enjoyed blogging this year and I look forward to many more years of dialoguing with the wider e-world. Cheers to All..

Gay Organ Donor Ban - This Hour has 22 Minutes

Check out this cute send-up of Health Canada's "new" policy banning gay men from donating organs. For more on this policy, check out this post from last week...

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Afghanistan's security is Canada's responsibility? And what of the rest of NATO?

I'm starting to greatly resent the implication being made by some diplomats, politicians and Canadian conservatives that Canada has a greater and long-term obligation to engage in hunting down the Taliban in Afghanistan's Kandahar region past February 2009.

To date, we've lost 76 Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan since the mission started, 68 of those since our mission became hunting and fighting the Taliban in the most dangerous region of that country in 2006. Before February 2009, we'll likely see another 30 or so deaths of Canadian soldiers.

I think our contribution to this particular aspect of the mission has been exceptional. It's time for other NATO countries, which also supported the Afghanistan war in 2001, to step up to the plate and take on their fair share of the efforts to beat the Taliban.

We lost 25 people in 9/11. We've lost 76 in Afghanistan fighting the Taliban.

***********UDPATE************

As indicated in one of the comments, as of this afternoon (January 15, 2008) that number of Canadian soldiers killed in Afghanistan has sadly risen to 77.

Same sex couples happier than straight couples?

I found this article to be quite interesting. Gay and lesbian couples are more likely to have satisfying marital and family relations than their straight counterparts, according to a leading researcher in both family issues and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) relationships.

Robert-Jay Green, executive director of the Rockway Institute which is affiliated with the California School of Professional Psychology at Alliant International University, says that gay and lesbian couples appear to be better than straight couples in respect of two key factors that promote healthier relationships: flexibility about gender roles and equal division of parenting and household tasks.

If I were as devious as some religious homophobes, who constantly make arguments that male-female relations are purely natural and complementary (unlike homosexual relations, which they frequently describe as inescapably unhealthy), I'd use this study as proof that heterosexual relations are actually more unnatural and inherently unequal. But of course, I won't be doing that anytime soon. I turn the other cheek, unlike many religious extremists out there. Live and let live, that's what I say...lol.

Monday, January 14, 2008

The Worst "Awards Show" Ever

What a drag Sunday night's Golden Globes awards telecast turned out to be. It was far worse than I had expected. The chemistry-challenged co-hosts Nancy O'Dell and Billy Bush (from Access Hollywood) did some mostly crappy adlibbing between announcing the winners with little fanfare.

After last year's broadcast which had some sweet and touching moments, like America Ferrera winning for Ugly Betty, this was utterly boring and disappointing, painful to watch.

I truly hope the producers get back to the bargaining table and end this writers' strike as soon as possible so we don't have to sit through another awards "announcement" like this again.

As for my predictions before the show, I did worse than usual: only 6 out of 14 film categories correct. Atonement, the Best Picture-Drama winner, is fabulous and very deserving. It will get a nice box office bounce from this win, I'm sure. I haven't yet seen No Country for Old Men or There Will Be Blood, but I have a feeling these two films will most certainly be in the race for Best Pic at the Oscars next month, despite tonight's losses. It looks like the Best Picture race for the Oscars remains wide open.

It was also great to see Julie Christie win for Away From Her. Her stunning performance in that beautifully romantic movie now seems like the Best Actress Oscar frontrunner.

Here is the full list of winners.

Best Motion Picture Drama: Atonement
Best Director, Motion Picture: Julian Schnabel, The Diving Bell & the Butterfly
Best Screenplay, Motion Picture: Ethan and Joel Coen for No Country for Old Men
Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama: Daniel Day-Lewis, There Will Be Blood
Best Actress in a Motion Picture Drama: Julie Christie, Away From Her
Best Motion Picture Musical or Comedy: Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Best Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy: Johnny Depp, Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Best Actress in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy: Marion Cotillard, La vie en Rose
Best Actress In A Supporting Role in a Motion Picture: Cate Blanchett, I'm Not There
Best Actor In A Supporting Role in a Motion Picture: Javier Bardem, No Country For Old Men
Best Animated Feature Film: Ratatouille
Best Score - Motion Picture: Atonement
Best Original Song - Motion Picture: "Guaranteed," by Eddie Vedder for Into the Wild

Best TV Series Drama: Mad Men
Best Actor in a TV Drama: Jon Hamm, Mad Men
Best Actress In A TV Drama: Glenn Close, Damages
Best TV Series Musical or Comedy: Extras
Best Actor in a TV Musical or Comedy: David Duchovny in Californication
Best Actress in a TV Musical or Comedy: Tina Fey, 30 Rock
Best TV Mini-Series or Motion Picture: Longford
Best Actor in a TV Mini-Series or Motion Picture: Jim Broadbent, Longford
Best Actress in a TV Mini-series or Motion Picture: Queen Latifah for Life Support
Best Supprting Actor in a TV Series, Mini-Series or Motion Picture: Jeremy Piven, Entourage
Best Supporting Actress in a TV Series, Mini-Series or Motion Picture: Samantha Morton, Longford

Saturday, January 12, 2008

My Golden Globe Predictions for tomorrow...

Now for something a little lighter, my predictions for tomorrow's Golden Globes. I'll be watching the abbreviated 'press conference' tomorrow with great interest. I guess there's no pre-show? Very sad...lol

GOLDEN GLOBE PREDICTIONS:

1. BEST MOTION PICTURE – DRAMA
NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN

2. BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A MOTION PICTURE – DRAMA
JULIE CHRISTIE – AWAY FROM HER

3. BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A MOTION PICTURE – DRAMA
DANIEL DAY-LEWIS – THERE WILL BE BLOOD

4. BEST MOTION PICTURE – COMEDY OR MUSICAL
JUNO

5.BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A MOTION PICTURE – COMEDY OR MUSICAL
ELLEN PAGE - JUNO

6. BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A MOTION PICTURE – COMEDY OR MUSICAL
JOHNNY DEPP – SWEENEY TODD: THE DEMON BARBER OF FLEET STREET

7. BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
RATATOUILLE

8. BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
THE DIVING BELL AND THE BUTTERFLY (FRANCE AND USA)

9. BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A MOTION PICTURE
AMY RYAN – GONE BABY GONE

10. BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A MOTION PICTURE
JAVIER BARDEM - NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN

11. BEST DIRECTOR – MOTION PICTURE
ETHAN COEN & JOEL COEN – NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN

12. BEST SCREENPLAY – MOTION PICTURE
DIABLO CODY - JUNO

13. BEST ORIGINAL SCORE – MOTION PICTURE
MICHAEL BROOK with KAKI KING and EDDIE VEDDER – INTO THE WILD

14. BEST ORIGINAL SONG – MOTION PICTURE
"GUARANTEED" – INTO THE WILD
Music & Lyrics by: Eddie Vedder

Friday, January 11, 2008

How not to introduce a new policy: Health Canada's "new" organ donation rules for gay men

The folks at Health Canada really bungled this one. Changes were quietly made last month to formalize long-standing rules with regard to screening out "high-risk" donors from the organ donation pool in Canada.

When the media began airing or writing stories on "the changes" this week, many transplant organizations across Canada said they hadn't heard of them. The new rules made it clear that sexually active gay men, in addition to being banned for life from donating blood, would also be banned after death from donating their organs (as long as they had had sex within five years of their "donation.") Queer community organizations were justifiably furious with this latest attack on our community's collective reputation.

A new Facebook group was formed to protest the "changes."

The Official Opposition in Ottawa got in on the attack, criticizing the Harper government for making changes in secret (a very justified criticism, in truth.)

Whoever handles communications at Health Canada should probably be looking for new work. These rules were portrayed at the beginning of the week as new, when in fact the rules simply formalized what had become standard practise. The new rules outlined an all-important loophole which allowed "high-risk" groups including gay men to still donate as long as the recipient knew the risks and agreed to take the possibly life-saving organ. As of December 2007, nothing really had changed at all.

No one at Health Canada agreed to speak with reporters to clarify this when stories first started to appear. Instead, this was left up to dismayed stakeholders like the Trillium Gift of Life Network.

The medical director for Canada's largest multi-organ transplant program, Dr. Gary Levy, confused matters when he first criticized the new rules as unfair, only to print this column in today's Globe & Mail which partially clarified the situation.

The new five-year rule is simply dumb. There is no way to effectively enforce it. Furthermore, why would doctors waste their time finding out the sexual history of a dead gay man when the loophole which allows them to use his organs exists? Health Canada should simply have instituted a lifetime ban like Canada Blood Services, with the loophole intact. Now both the five-year rule and the lifetime ban have been exposed as arbitrary and unscientific.

I don't quibble with long-standing rules that bar sexually active gay men from donating blood. It is sadly true that gay men remain one of the highest groups for new HIV infection in Canada. It's true that the screening rules used by Canada Blood Services are heavy-handed and shut out many, many Canadians who are, in fact, not real risks. But the agency seems to be applying its overly stringent standards across the board, not just at gay men. It seems the blood-collecting agency is taking no chances, unlike the Red Cross in the past.

When I first heard this week that gay men would be "banned" from donating organs, I immediately tore up my organ donor card in frustration. I'm sure thousands of gay men across the country did the same. How tragic when there has been, in fact, no change to the rules governing organ donations at all. I'll have to get another organ donor card, but I'm not sure when and where I'll do this.

This is the end result of a truly bungled media communications job. Heads should roll at Health Canada and Tory Health Minister Tony Clement should be held to account for this fiasco.

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

New anti-gay organ donation rules should be rethought, says head of Canada's largest transplant program

Health Canada's new rules banning all gay men - regardless of health status, behaviour or other personal circumstances - from donating organs continue to face a backlash across the country.

The inherent flaws of the policy, which depend on family disclosure of a gay man's sexual orientation after his death, specifically whether or not he had been sexually active in the previous five years, continue to confound critics. If a man had sex with another man within the previous five years, his organs can't be donated to a needy recipient. Instead, perfectly good organs will go to waste simply because they belonged to a gay man.

Will Health Canada be issuing special pink organ donor cards to make identifying gay men easier after death?

Chatter from some bloggers has been very negative.

Now the head of the country's largest organ transplant organization says the new policy should be rethought.

Dr. Gary Levy, director of the multi-organ transplant program for the University Health Network in Toronto, criticized the new rules for zeroing in on gay men as a specific health problem.

"In the past, the gay community was considered a high-risk community because of perception of high-risk behaviour," he said yesterday. "We now know it's not a homogeneous community. The fact is, if someone has 62 partners, whether it's heterosexual or homosexual, there still is a risk.

"That community was singled out. I think that's unfortunate."

At first, officials at Health Canada refused to comment publicly on the new regulations. Now a major loophole in the new policy has come to light. The loophole lets transplant programs accept organs even from high-risk donors under exceptional conditions, such as non-availability of an organ that has met all safety criteria.

The recipient would have to agree and the organ could not test positive for disease. But the new rules mean the transplant program must keep records of why the exception was made, including the "justification" behind it.

The paperwork could discourage some programs from making perfectly healthy organs available.

Health Canada apparently issued a statement yesterday saying it had consulted widely on the new standards, and "during these consultations, no group or association expressed concerns" about the wording of the rules.

Clearly they failed to consult many in the LGBT community, one of the groups greatly and unjustly impacted by the new policy.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Standing Against Queer Discrimination - Students slam new Health Canada ban on gay organs

A University of Western Ontario student group released this statement today assailing Health Canada's new organ donor regulations banning gay men from donating healthy organs after death. They correctly attack the discriminatory regs for being arbitrary and not based on science. Instead, Health Canada seems more concerned with "re-assuring" straight Canadians that organ donations are safe by using stereotypes and outdated beliefs.

For more on this story, check out this Xtra article. This issue is not going away...

Standing Against Queer Discrimination / STATEMENT

The University of Western Ontario branch of Standing Against Queer Discrimination gives its reasons for not supporting the new organ donor rules, below.

Health Canada has recently instituted a new policy which bans all sexually active gay men from donating organs, regardless of their HIV status. This latest outrage from Health Canada, which came as a surprise even to many transplant organizations, illustrates both the arbitrariness of their policies with respect to gay men and their lack of commitment to any real change of their discriminatory and blatantly homophobic policies.

Firstly, this latest policy (banning gay men from donating organs) creates restrictions based on a 5-year ban, excluding only men who have had sex with men in the last 5 years. In combination with their June 2007 decision to continue banning blood donations from men who have had sex with men since 1979, it becomes clear that rather than basing these decisions on scientific facts regarding HIV prevalence in various populations, they are instead assigning arbitrary restrictions.

The reasoning behind these arbitrary policy decisions becomes evident when their purpose is considered. Rather than promoting the safety of the blood or organ supply, the publicly-stated reasoning for these policies, the policy instead serves the purpose of 'reassuring' the public, convincing them that yes, those dangerous groups (gay men, IV drug users, and sex workers) have been filtered out. The use of stereotypes and outdated beliefs to restore the public's trust is being chosen instead of rigorous scientific research, and this is not acceptable from an organization which claims to have the best interests of all Canadians at heart.

We join with those across the country calling for a clear and evidence-based explanation for both the old policy and the new, as well as an assurance that any restrictions are based on the behaviours and actions found to increase risk, rather than membership in a supposed "high-risk group".

Standing Against Queer Discrimination - University of Western Ontario (SAQD-UWO)

Monday, January 7, 2008

I guess I might as well rip up my Organ Donor card now...

For the record, I am not HIV-positive. I've never engaged in any sexual activity that would put me at risk of becoming HIV-positive. I don't take risks, I'm rather fond of being alive. Despite this, I've been tested for HIV just to be sure, and have always come up negative. I've been with one partner for the last 2.5 years, have never cheated and never will.

That's why this announcement from the Harper government banning gay men from donating organs is truly disgusting. I wonder what John Baird and other gay Tories think about it.

The policy is reminiscent of Canada Blood Services' similar ban on sexually-active gay men and others from donating blood.

The big difference, of course, is Canada Blood Services conducts its screening on living people. Potential blood donors must answer questions before donating. If a man answers 'Yes' to the question asking if he has had sex with another man, even once, since 1977, he is disallowed from donating blood. The answer, coming from the would-be donor, is credible.

How will Health Canada, hospitals and other organ donation officials screen out gay men from donating organs after they die?

The explanation thus far is absolutely pathetic and stupid!

Transplant Manitoba, which procures organs in that province, says transplant programs must now by law interview family members of the donor as part of screening potential donors.

"We'll be asking about things like travel, history of infectious disease, whether they've [donors] been in jail — that puts you at increased risk," says Dr. Peter Nickerson, director of Transplant Manitoba. "Have they been an IV drug abuser in the past? Have they had tattoos? There's a whole list of questions we go through."

As well, they will be asked about the donor's sexual orientation. The donor will be excluded if the donor is a man who had sex with another man in the previous five years.

What happens if the family doesn't know about the man's sexual orientation? What if the family isn't willing to admit to a health official that their son was gay? How can the family answer if their son has had sex with a man in the past five years versus the past six years?

Why are men who have had sex with another man in the previous five years excluded? If it's been six years since you had sex with another man, why are your organs so special and acceptable?

This policy is shoddy, full-of-holes and can't stand up under serious scrutiny. It's stupid and blatantly discriminatory. I foresee a human rights lawsuit coming on.

My organs are as safe as any heterosexual's. This policy is absolute bullshit! Chalk this policy up as yet another despicable attempt by the Harper government to further insinuate that gay men are somehow inherently unhealthy, regardless of behaviour and life choices.

I wouldn't want to be a Golden Globe nominee this year...

For movie awards season junkies like myself, it doesn't look good. It's likely there won't be a Golden Globes awards telecast this Sunday as scheduled. NBC is set to announce its final decision today.

The problem stems from a pledge from the Screen Actors Guild to boycott this weekend's scheduled Golden Globe Awards if the writers form a picket line in front of the awards show. The writers have promised to picket any televised awards show that uses scab writers. If the event isn't televised, the writers won't picket it.

The producers and studios are playing hard ball in this ongoing strike, refusing to hold meaningful talks for weeks. Of course, this has caused considerable pain in Hollywood's film community and elsewhere. As productions have been shut down, everyone has found themselves out of work. Yet the issue of profit-sharing is vital. Most writers already get only a tiny sliver from considerable Hollywood profits. Writers are fighting to ensure they get a bigger share of any profits from new media, which could end up being huge in the years ahead. As a screenwriter who hopes to be a member of the WGA one day, I support the writers 100 per cent.

But still it will be painful if the Golden Globes telecast is cancelled this Sunday. This show sets the tone for the rest of the awards season which ends with the Oscars in late February. The race to the Oscars keeps many a queer film fan's heart warm during the winter months. The heterosexual equivalent would be cancelling the SuperBowl.

Still as a strategy, the striking writers are brilliant. Shutting down major awards shows hurts the producers and the networks the most, which rely on the advertising revenue and the publicity to boost sales for their products. Perhaps the lost profits will give them a needed taste of their own medicine.

I do feel for those Globe nominees though. Such televised accolades are the stuff of dreams. To have the awards show shut down in their year must be truly painful. However, most nominees are extremely smart people and they likely all agree the long-term benefits of showing solidarity with their writing colleagues is more important.

We'll see if the producers budge in time for the Oscar ceremony in late February. If the writers choose to picket that ceremony as well, that would truly put actors' and other film professionals' solidarity to the test.

*************UPDATE

Indeed, NBC and the Hollywood Foreign Press Association have decided to drop the awards ceremony for this Sunday's Golden Globes. Instead of the traditional show featuring a boozy, glitzy dinner party and awards presentation, the event would be covered as a news event in a series of NBC specials, according to a Los Angeles Times report that cited an NBC memo e-mailed to movie studios.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Pope starts 2008 with new attack on gays, blames SSM for war


Dinosaur Pope Benedict reminded us all why many hate the Catholic Church and other organized religions a couple days ago when he said any deviation from the traditional family unit undermines world peace.

On Sunday addressing a crowd in St Peter's Square from his apartment window at the Vatican, he said that support for anything less than the traditional family unit was disrupting society.

"I wanted to shed light on the direct relationship that exists between the family and peace in the world," the Pope said.

"The family is the primary agent of peace and the negation or even the restriction of rights of the family ... threatens the very foundations of peace."

The Pope's comments, in both Italian and Spanish, were carried by satellite and telecast to a rally in a public square in Madrid where thousands of Catholics were protesting against Spain's two year old gay marriage law.

Appropriately, Spain's government has criticized the Catholic Church's latest political intervention.

But perhaps the Pope is on to something? One need only look at the list of countries that have accepted full equality for LGBT citizens and supported same sex marriage (SSM) to find proof how such actions undermine world peace:

- The Netherlands
- Belgium
- Canada
- South Africa
- Spain

Wow, big destabilizers of world peace there. Countries that continue to attack gay rights and fight equality for LGBT citizens:

- United States
- Iran
- Saudi Arabia
- Russia
- Pakistan
- countless others, you get the drift...

Man, whatever would we do without these and other countries to help protect world peace?