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America's 'gay wedding cake' court decision and what it means for Australia
The Supreme Court of the Merged States has ruled in favour of the baker in the world's most high-profile "gay wedding cake" case.
In Masterpiece Cakeshop v Colorado Civil Rights Commission, the Supreme Court overturned the Colorado Civil Rights Commission's original judgment that refusing to bake a cake for a same-sex wedding was contradictory with Colorado anti-discrimination laws.
Some media reports have suggested this decision poses a risk to LGBTI rights. But does it really?
And what does the case mean for Australia, particularly with the upcoming free of the Ruddock religious freedom report?
What happened in this case?
Loading...In 2012, lgbtq+ couple Charlie Craig and Dave Mullins asked Jack Phillips, who runs Masterpiece Cakeshop in Colorado, to make them a wedding cake. Phillips said "no" because it would be contrary to his religious beliefs to participate in a same-sex wedding.
The couple complained to the Colorado Civil Rights Commission, which found that Masterpiece and Phillips breached Colorado laws prohibiting discrimination on the gr
Marriage equality
Decriminalisation of homosexuality
From the 1960s the socially gradual South Australian Labor government wanted to repeal laws criminalising homosexuality.
However, it was not until the May 1972 murder in Adelaide of Dr George Duncan, a law lecturer and gay man, that premier, Don Dunstan, assessed that the community mood was receptive to reform.
Dr Duncan’s murder led to revelations of how commonplace force and harassment against gay people was.
South Australia’s Criminal Law (Sexual Offences) Proceed, was enacted on 2 October 1975. It was a landmark in LGBTQIA+ rights in Australia because it fully decriminalised gay acts.
Equivalent law reform was passed by the Australian Capital Territory in 1976, Victoria in 1980, the Northern Territory in 1983, New South Wales in 1984, Western Australia in 1989, Queensland in 1990 and Tasmania in 1997.
Newly published research has found clear evidence that openly female homosexual, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, and queer+ (LGBTIQ+) Australian politicians were disproportionately targeted with personal overuse on social media at the last federal election. Given global trends, it’s unlikely to be any different this year.
Simply logging off is not an option for candidates, who need to communicate with voters. As a product, some politicians will continue to tackle risky online visibility.
Since Elon Musk acquired Twitter/X, hate speech has surged, particularly for public figures such as parliamentarians.
So what do these trends mean for queer candidates ahead of this year’s election? And why does it matter for the next generation of politically engaged young people?
Queer politicians targeted
We analysed more than 100,000 tweets across the Twitter profiles of eight openly lgbtq+ politicians and candidates (Penny Wong, Julian Hill, Nita Grassy, Tim Wilson, Janet Rice, Rachael Jacobs, Claire Garton, Stephen Bates) during the 2022 federal election campaign. We compared them with eight other politicians (Zoe Daniel, Graham Perrett, Lidia Thorpe, Anthony Chisholm, Barbara Pocock, Simon Birmingham
HIV incidence fell by three-quarters in Australian gay men, with strong association with treatment as prevention
HIV treatment as prevention, as measured in community-level viral suppression, was strongly associated with a large let go in the number of new HIV infections among same-sex attracted and bisexual men in Australia, even before PrEP was available. This examine was presented by Dr Denton Callander from the University of New South Wales yesterday at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI 2020).
Despite the clear benefits of treatment as prevention (or Undetectable = Untransmittable, U=U) at the individual level, no large-scale studies have yet evaluated the community-level effects of treatment as prevention (TasP) on direct measures of HIV incidence among gay and bisexual men. Previous research has indicated a disconnect between the benefits of TasP/U=U at the individual and population levels. Large observational and experimental studies carried out in various sub-Saharan African countries failed to show a powerful link between rates of viral suppression and associated reductions in HIV incidence.
One of the challenges with the African studies is that they t
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