Thứ Ba, 3 tháng 7, 2018

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Same-sex marriage: six months on there's much to celebrate, more to do The Conversation By Paula Gerber  It has been six months since Australia declared that marriage is no longer an exclusively heterosexual institution

 In that time, about 2,500 same-sex couples have been married, with NSW recording the most weddings, closely followed by Victoria and Queensland

Many more couples, who married overseas before marriage equality was achieved here, have finally had their marriages recognised under Australian law

 The 2016 Census revealed that there are 46,800 same-sex couples living together in Australia

Of these couples, 3,142 reported they were the husband or wife of someone of the same sex (presumably because they were married overseas)

If we combine this figure with the number of same-sex marriages registered in the last six months, it appears that over 10 per cent of same-sex couples who live together are now married

Lessons learnt from SSM survey I wondered if anyone else was feeling like me — not quite sure how to encapsulate the impact of same-sex marriage, writes Heather Faulkner

  What's changed? During the postal survey, the "No" campaign warned of dire consequences if the institution of marriage was opened up to non-heterosexual couples

There was a stream of ads asserting that boys would start wearing dresses to school, students would role-play being in same-sex relationships, and radical LGBT sex and gender education would become mandatory

Safe Schools — a national program to combat bullying of LGBT students — came under particularly heavy and sustained attack

 So have any of these fears been realised? The answer seems to be a resounding "no"

 For example, the South Australian government has ceased to fund the Safe Schools program, two years before the service provider's contract was due to expire

As a result, that program will end in secondary schools on July 13. The Government has indicated that it will be replaced with a general anti-bullying program, but this fails to recognise that LGBTI people have significantly poorer mental health and higher rates of suicide than other Australians because of the discrimination and bullying they are subjected to

 In Victoria, Opposition Leader Matthew Guy has vowed to scrap the Safe Schools program if the Coalition wins the next election

So rather than marriage equality being the catalyst for more inclusive education, the opposite may be true

What about religious freedom? Marriage equality wasn't the end of the fight for LGBTI equality Most Australians probably think that now we have marriage equality, LGBTI people's rights are fully respected

Unfortunately, that's not the case.    The campaign around the marriage equality survey also saw opponents assert that allowing same-sex couples to marry would lead to a significant infringement on religious freedom

 To allay these concerns, the Turnbull Government initiated an inquiry into whether Australian law adequately protects religious freedom

The panel delivered its report last month, but the Government has not yet released it to the public

 There is concern among human rights advocates that rather than limiting the exemptions that religious organisations currently enjoy from anti-discrimination laws, the Government will expand the extent to which people can legitimately be discriminated against on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity

America testing the limits Such concerns are not baseless, if the American experience is anything to go by

In the US, once opponents of marriage equality had lost that battle, they shifted their focus to arguing that service providers who have religious beliefs that reject homosexuality should be allowed to treat LGBTIQ people less favourably

 This was the argument run in the US Supreme Court case of Masterpiece Cakeshop, in which a Colorado baker refused to make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple

   Although the Supreme Court upheld the claim of the baker, it did so on the narrow ground that the Colorado Civil Rights Commission handled the original discrimination complaint against Masterpiece Cakeshop in a biased and unfair manner

 The judges were very clear in stating that service providers should not be entitled to refuse to provide goods or services for same-sex weddings

Justice Kennedy noted that allowing discrimination against same-sex couples would cause: The Australian Christian Lobby has already suggested that this decision lends support to their argument that bakers, florists, motels and even lawyers should be able to refuse to provide goods and services in connection with same-sex weddings

External Link: Tweet by Lyle Shelton    However, as my colleague Luke Beck observed, there is nothing in the Masterpiece Cakeshop decision to support that position

On the contrary, "the Masterpiece case says that people who are accused of discrimination are entitled to a fair hearing and that gay people are entitled to dignified treatment"

More to be done Amending the Marriage Act to allow same-sex couples to wed was a significant step forward

But it is not a panacea. Law reform alone will never lead to true equality. South Africa is a stark reminder of this

It has had constitutional protection against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity since 1996, but it is still an extremely dangerous place for LGBT people, with high rates of violent hate-based crimes

A 2017 report found four out of ten LGBT South Africans knew someone who had been murdered "for being or suspected of being" lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender

 In Australia, the reform of marriage laws that we witnessed six months ago is just one piece of the jigsaw puzzle, albeit an important one

   Amending laws contributes to transforming public opinion, but achieving long term change requires a more holistic approach

The elimination of discrimination against LGBT people won't be achieved until we have increased positive representation of sexual and gender diversity in films, education, the media and from religious leaders

 We will know we have achieved true equality for LGBT people when we not only have laws that prevent a person being fired from their job or denied a service because of their sexual orientation or gender identity, but we also no longer have people arguing that they should be entitled to do so

 Paula Gerber is a professor of human rights law at Monash University. This article originally appeared on The Conversation

For more infomation >> Six months on, how many same- marriages have there been? - Duration: 10:13.

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How Much Better Is the NBA's Western Conference Than the Eastern Conference After LeBron's Lakers Mo - Duration: 5:25.

 The NBA's Eastern Conference was already weak as hell last year. Then the greatest player in a generation decided to head West

 We're of course talking about LeBron James signing a four-year deal with the Los Angeles Lakers on Sunday, leaving behind his hometown Cleveland Cavaliers for the second time and beginning a new chapter with the league's most storied franchise

  With his decision, James further diluted the talent pool of an already anemic Eastern Conference

 That in mind, Newsweek parsed through Basketball Reference's win-shares league leaders for last season, listing the top 30 players in each conference now that James has defected to the West

For the uninitiated, win-shares effectively estimate how many wins a player was responsible for throughout the course of a season—and, like any stat, taken alone it is imperfect, but it's generally considered a decent measurement for overall performance

 Recommended Slideshows76In Pictures: the Biggest Stadiums in the World51In Pictures: 50 Highest-Paid Athletes in the World32World's Most Valuable Sports Teams According to the stats collected by Newsweek, the top 30 players in the Western Conference totaled 279

3 win-shares last season. Post LeBron, the top 30 in the East, meanwhile, managed just 219

9. That's a difference of 54 wins or about a 25 percent gap between the West and the East

 To put that in perspective, the entirety of the NBA's top five in win-shares—according to Basketball Reference—came from the Western Conference: Houston's James Harden (15

4), Los Angeles's LeBron James (14), Minnesota's Karl-Anthony Towns (14), New Orleans' Anthony Davis (13

7) and Portland's Damian Lillard (12.6). The Eastern Conference's Giannis Antetokounmpo (Milwaukee) was sixth at 11

9.   There are quite a few caveats to this stat, of course. Some players are likely overrated by it—looking at you Karl-Anthony Towns—while some players are likely underrated by it (looking at you Draymond Green and Joel Embiid)

Some players are absent who likely would have made the top 30 if not for injuries, such as the Spurs' Kawhi Leonard or the Celtics' Gordon Hayward

And some of the top players are likely to shift conferences in the weeks to come

 But still the overall point stands: The Eastern Conference is really running low on top-level talent

 As the Associated Press's Tim Reynolds wrote on Twitter: "There are 7 MVPs currently active in the NBA

All play in the West. There are 16 players who have been first-team All-NBA selections active

13 play in the West. West has guys with 168 All-Star appearances. East rosters have guys with 69 combined

" In other words: The Western Conference is chock full of firepower. The East is mostly water pistols

 

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