Latest News Roundup - August 2010
Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Halifax gay man says he was asked to leave taxi after kiss

After a night out at Halifax's Menz Bar, Paul Laybolt says he and his husband were told to get out of a taxi after they shared a brief kiss. 

Watch haligonia.ca's video interview with Laybolt:  

 
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Monday, August 30, 2010

Peter Breeze's sexy, gay "X-Rated Angel" video

In a 2008 interview with Xtra, Vancouver's Peter Breeze had some advice for young queer artists looking to make it big:

"Don't be afraid to identify yourself as gay, make music or films that are gay, talk about being gay or write about being gay because it is something that needs to be done."

True to his word, Breeze has just released a new video, "X-Rated Angel," that features lots of sexy same-sex canoodling. And woah, did you see that cape? Check it out: 

 
 
Find out more about Peter Breeze at myspace.com/peterbreezemusic.

(Kudos to our Vancouver blogger Sean Horlor for bringing this video to our attention!)

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Friday, August 27, 2010

Toronto endorses harm reduction over drug enforcement

After a 33-7 vote yesterday, Toronto City Council endorsed the Vienna Declaration, a document that denounces the war on drugs, the National Post reports.

The declaration favours public health responses to drugs instead of enforcement.

“The war against drugs has failed. In every jurisdiction and in every community, we know that policing this issue is not enough,” said gaybourhood councillor Kyle Rae.

Last year, controversy erupted during a Toronto safe consumption site feasibility study when Prime Minister Stephen Harper said he planned to shut down a Vancouver safe injection site.

The Vienna Declaration aims to end all that.

“The criminalization of illicit drug users is fuelling the HIV epidemic and has resulted in overwhelmingly negative health and social consequences. A full policy reorientation is needed.”

Approving the Vienna Declaration does not necessarily mean Toronto will have its own safe consumption site, says Councillor Gord Perks and Toronto Drug Strategy board chairperson.

“It’s a declaration, not a prescription. It would simply reinforce the existing Toronto Drug Strategy. For example, Public Health workers already hand out safe crack kits to prevent the spread of hepatitis and have numerous other programs for drug users,” says Perks.

In 2007, Shawn Syms wrote that embracing harm reduction could revitalize queer politics:

Law-enforcement officials will tell you drugs like crack are illegal because they're harmful to users and society. But the reverse is even more true — some drug use is harmful specifically because of the fact that it's against the law.

For instance, needle use can lead to many more health problems than inhaling a substance — such as abscesses, endocarditis (a potentially fatal heart infection) and a greater risk of overdose and death. But if you can be arrested for getting high, many people will choose the route least likely to be detected — and shooting up generates no telltale smoke or odours.

One of the biggest harms of all associated with addictive drugs is their economic cost. It's easy to link illicit drug use and criminal acts such as theft — after all, both are considered morally suspect in the public imagination. But most addicts wouldn't steal if illegal drugs — produced and distributed via underground economies fraught with risk — were not so unfairly expensive. In this way, drug laws set up a cycle of incarceration that wouldn't otherwise exist.



COMPILED BY NEIL MCKINNON
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Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Sexy art project is too hot for YouTube but just fine on Vimeo

Continuing its practice of sex-phobic censorship, YouTube has banned a video art project by fab contributor Drasko Bogdanovic.

The video shows Corey Kirk (pictured) in his underpants, running his hands over his skin. A Post-It note on his belly says "Mine!" The video, part of the Fearless Project, is widely available, courtesy of Vimeo and at fear-less.com

Watch Bogdanovic's video in its original form on Vimeo:

Compare that with the YouTube version below, censored to meet the site's strict guidelines:

 
Related stories: 

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Monday, August 23, 2010

Kelly & The Kellygirls' political "Better Times" video

Kelly & The Kellygirls have just released a video for their track "Better Times," and the queer Canadian indie group connects the dots between past and present activism.

The video features protest footage from the Pride Toronto censorship controversy, the Toronto G20 and the 1981 Toronto bathhouses raids. It ends with Trudeau's famous line, "There's no place for the state in the bedrooms of the nation." You might also recognize a number of queer community activists, including El-Farouk Khaki, Ryan G Hinds, Elle Flanders, Jane Farrow, Troy Jackson, Tim McCaskell, Kristyn Wong-Tam, Anna Willats and Jeremy Dias.  

Watch:

 

 

Speaking of Pride Toronto, the organization is looking for three new board members. The deadline for applications is Wednesday, Aug 25.

Find out more about Kelly & The Kellygirls at kellyclipperton.com. 

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The Roundup

Xtra.ca's Roundup
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The Roundup is
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Andrea Houston
andrea.houston@xtra.ca

Natasha Barsotti
natasha.barsotti@xtra.ca

 


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