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Life After Jerusalem
The musings of an Out and Proud Foreign Service Officer
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Transcript: Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton At An Event Celebrating Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Month
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office of the Spokesman
For Immediate Release June 22, 2010
2010/840
Remarks
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
At An Event Celebrating Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Month
June 22, 2010
Loy Henderson Auditorium
Washington, D.C.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you. Thank you all very much. (Applause.) Thank you. Gee, let’s do this every week. (Laughter.) It’s great after a hard week to tell you how delighted I am to join with all of you from the State Department and USAID and indeed from departments across our government and many guests who are here in the State Department celebrating Pride Month.
And the purpose of this occasion is to recognize with gratitude the contributions made by LGBT members of the State Department family every single day. We celebrate the progress that is being made here in our own country toward advancing the rights of LGBT Americans, and we recognize that there is still a lot of work to be done but that we are moving together in the right direction. And we reaffirm our commitment to protect and advance the rights of all human beings, as Cheryl just said, of members of the LGBT community around the world. I want to thank Administrator Raj Shah who we are so delighted, is leading USAID into a very positive future. I want to thank Eric Schwartz, who has traveled tirelessly on behalf of his bureau here at the State Department, dealing with population, refugees, migration. And I want to thank Bob Gilchrist, the outgoing GLIFAA president, for his leadership.
I look around this room and there are not only familiar faces, but there are some longtime friends whom I have had the great personal pleasure of knowing over the years. And I must say that knowing my friends who are here, and assuming much about many of you, I know that this occasion is really part of a deeply personal effort that has impacted lives and has helped to create, as Cheryl said, more space and time for people to lead their own lives. And people in this room – I know from experience – have marched in parades and demonstrations; have lobbied our government and other governments to overturn discriminatory laws; have demonstrated courage, both in public and private, to confront hatred and intolerance; and have helped to build a national movement that reflects the diversity of America.
I have been really moved and greatly motivated by the personal stories and the testimonies of so many whom I have known over so many years. Ten years ago, I was the first First Lady – that is often a phrase that I hear – I was the first First Lady to march in a Pride parade, and it was so much fun. (Applause.) And one or two of you marched with me and I am still grateful to you. (Laughter.) As a senator from New York, I was proud to co-sponsor the Employment Non-Discrimination Act; the Domestic Partnership Benefits and Obligations Act, which would grant equal benefits to same-sex domestic partners of federal employees; and the Matthew Shephard [sic] Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which President Obama signed into law this year. (Applause.)
Now, we, though, in the State Department have to continue the work that many of you have begun and many of you carry on around the world. And I’m very proud that the United States, and particularly the State Department, is taking the lead to confront the circumstances that LGBT people face in just going about their daily lives. So as we enjoy today’s celebration and as we mark the progress that has been truly remarkable – I know that when you’re in the midst of a great movement of change it seems like it is glacial, but any fair assessment, from my perspective, having lived longer than at least more than 75 percent of you that I see in this room – (laughter) – is that it is extraordinary what has happened in such a short period of time.
But think about what’s happening to people as we speak today. Men and women are harassed, beaten, subjected to sexual violence, even killed, because of who they are and whom they love. Some are driven from their homes or countries, and many who become refugees confront new threats in their countries of asylum. In some places, violence against the LGBT community is permitted by law and inflamed by public calls to violence; in others, it persists insidiously behind closed doors.
These dangers are not “gay” issues. This is a human rights issue. (Applause.) Just as I was very proud to say the obvious more than 15 years ago in Beijing that human rights are women’s rights and women’s rights are human rights, well, let me say today that human rights are gay rights and gay rights are human rights, once and for all. (Applause.)
So here at the State Department, we will continue to advance a comprehensive human rights agenda that includes the elimination of violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. We are elevating our human rights dialogues with other governments and conducting public diplomacy to protect the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender persons.
Our Bureau for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor produces an annual Human Rights Report that include a section on how LGBT persons are treated in every country. And recently, that bureau announced a new grant to provide emergency aid to human rights defenders in Africa, South Asia, and the Middle East who are at risk, either because they work on these issues or because of their LGBT status.
Our regional bureaus are working closely with our embassies on this issue. The Bureau of African Affairs has taken the lead by asking every embassy in Africa to report on the conditions of local LGBT communities. And I’m asking every regional bureau to make this issue a priority. (Applause.)
Today, we are joined by four human rights activists from Africa who are working to protect LGBT rights in their communities. I want to welcome them to the State Department and ask if they would stand: our four African activists. (Applause.) I thank you for the work you do, often in unfriendly, even dangerous circumstances, to advance the rights and dignity of all people.
Now, the United States is also focused on threats facing LGBT refugees. Eric Schwartz is working to increase protection for refugees who face persecution because of their sexual orientation or gender identity. Dr. Eric Goosby, through the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, PEPFAR, is working to ensure that HIV prevention, treatment, and care are provided to all members of the LGBT population. For example, in the greater Mekong sub-region, we support the Purple Sky Network, which helps protect the health of gay men and transgender people who are too often overlooked or excluded from lifesaving social services.
And around the world, members of the U.S. Foreign Service continue to stand with LGBT communities in ways both large and small. There are two people who are not here that I want to mention and recognize, because they are indicative of both what people face as they fight for these rights and what our embassies and posts across the globe are doing to support them.
In Albania, a young man named Klodian Cela recently came out on a popular television program called Big Brother. Soon after, our ambassador, John Withers, went on television to publicly express support for this man. He visited his hometown and he invited him to an event at our Embassy, conveying to all Albanians that the United States supports his rights and respects his courage.
In Slovakia, at that nation’s first ever Pride Parade last month, our chargé, Keith Eddins, marched to represent the United States. There were anti-gay protestors who became violent and the police used tear gas, which our chargé and other diplomats were exposed to – a quite unpleasant experience, but in service to a just cause.
So as we continue to advance LGBT rights in other countries, we also must continually work to make sure we are advancing the agenda here.
At the State Department, USAID, and throughout the Administration, we are grateful for the contributions of all of our team. And I just want to say thank you, thank you to those of you who serve, thank you for doing so by being open and honest about who you are and helping others see the dignity and purpose of every individual. Our work is demanding and we need every person to give 100 percent. And that means creating an environment in which everyone knows they are valued and feels free to make their contribution.
Last year, I received a petition with more than 2,200 signatures supporting equal benefits to same-sex partners. And I was delighted that soon after, the President signed an executive order to that effect. This month, the Bureau of Consular Affairs issued new regulations making it easier for transgender Americans to amend their passports, ensuring dignified and fair processing. And today, I’m pleased to announce that for the first time, gender identity will be included along with sexual orientation in the State Department Equal Employee Opportunity Statement. (Applause.)
Now, we know that a lot of work lies ahead, and I really want to challenge each and every one of you. Whether you’re LGBT or not, if you’re here, you obviously care about or at least were curious enough to come, and therefore are exhibiting an interest in what we are attempting to achieve here. And in looking at you and seeing a group of accomplished, successful, well-educated, professionally challenged people reminds me that many in our own country, let alone around the world, who are LGBT don’t have those tools, don’t have those assets to be able to speak for themselves, to stand up for themselves, to be in a position to claim who they are.
I used to, when I represented New York, have the great joy and honor of traveling across New York state, so I could go to a Pride Parade in New York City and then I could be a few days later somewhere in upstate New York, where someone would take me aside after an event and whisper their fears about the life they led and wonder whether there was anything we could do. And I used to remind my very activist friends in the Pride movement that they were doing this not for themselves, because basically many of them were well enough off to be able to construct a life that would be fairly immune from the outside world, but they were doing it for so many others who did not have that opportunity, that luxury, if you will.
Well, I still believe that. We’ve come such a far distance in our own country, but there are still so many who need the outreach, need the mentoring, need the support, to stand up and be who they are, and then think about people in so many countries where it just seems impossible. So I think that each and every one of you not only professionally, particularly from State and USAID in every bureau and every embassy and every part of our government, have to do what you can to create that safe space, but also personally to really look for those who might need a helping hand, particularly young people, particularly teenagers who still, today, have such a difficult time and who still, in numbers far beyond what should ever happen, take their own lives rather than live that life. So I would ask you to please think of ways you can be there for everyone who is making this journey to defend not only human rights globally, but to truly defend themselves and their rights. The struggle for equality is never, ever finished. And it is rarely easy, despite how self-evident it should be. But the hardest-fought battles often have the biggest impact. So I hope that each and every one of us will recommit ourselves to building a future in which every person – every, single person can live in dignity, free from violence, free to be themselves, free to live up to their God-given potential wherever they live and whoever they are. And I thank you for being part of one of history’s great moments.
Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
Here is a link to the
video
.
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Our Yuppie Life (EFM)
Outbound to Wonderland (FSO)
Overseas Insights (EFM)
Pantsuits and Pearls (FSO)
Patchwork Planet (EFM)
Paul Benjamin: Writer, Editor, Supermodel (male EFM)
Peripatetic (FSO)
place2place (EFM)
Political Fermentations (FSO)
Port-Au-Yinz (FSO)
Psychological Diplomacy (FSO)
Pulling Stakes (EFM w/kids)
Rambles and Ruminations (EFM)
Random Neural Firings (FSO)
Rant Rant Rant (EFM w/kids)
Red Licorice and Jujubes (female FSO)
Rees Family Bogota (EFM - invitation only)
Reflections from Maadi (EFM w/kids)
Ren's Microdiplomacy (PD fellow)
Rhubard and Rhetoric (female FSO)
Rhymes With Icenogle (male EFM)
Rock Star in Dhaka (female FSO)
Ryan and Lori's Exciting Adventures (male EFM)
Ryan and Lori’s Exciting Adventures (old)
Sadie Abroad (female FSO)
SassAndSweet (female FSO)
Saunder's Family (FSO and EFM)
Scaling Back and Moving On (EFM)
SchutzHappens (EFM)
Scott and Jill's Big Adventure (EFM)
Scott At State (FSO)
Scrivners (FSO)
SD Dispatches (FSO)
Seasons Worth Savoring (formerly Kolb Webs - EFM)
Seltzer Water and Other Things (FSS)
Serenity now...Insanity Later (FSO, EFM and cats)
Sewing in No Man's Land (EFM w/kids)
Shenyanigans (FSO)
Sherwood Family Nonsense (EFM w/kids)
Short Term Memory (tandem couple)
Simmon says (EFM)
Six Abroad (EFM)
Six Months of Settled (EFM - invitation only)
Skeptical Bureaucrat (CS)
Small Bits (EFM)
Something Edited This Way Comes (EFM w/kids)
Something Witty This Way Comes (female FSO)
sophiakodotcom (EFM)
Spectrummy Mummy (EFM w/special needs child)
Stamps In Our Passports (EFM)
Steve and Lisa (FSO)
Striped Pants and Cowboy Boots
SubjectVerbObject (female FSO)
Suit Up! Life in the Foreign Service (USAID FSO)
Super Mario Diplomacy (FSO)
Swaggering Pirates (female AID FSO)
Switzerland (female FSO)
Tabbies in Tow (FSS)
Taitai Knits (EFM)
Tales From a Not So Lonely Planet (female FSO)
Tales of Dragons, Rabbits and Roosters (EFM w/kids)
Tasman's World (FSO)
Teamroy Adventures (FSO)
Technobedouin (FSO)
Ted Cross Blog (FSO)
Ten and Soprano (EFM w/kids)
That Lady, There (female FSO)
The Accidental Diplomat (EFM w/kids)
The Adventures of Hutch and Dutch (FSO/EFM)
The Afghan Plan (FSO)
The B Files (female FSO)
The Barefoot Nomads (EFM)
The Briden Bunch (EFM)
The Bryant Blogger (FSS and EFM w/kids)
The Chronicles of Ruben and Rohan (FSO)
The Consuls' Files (female FSO - invitation only)
The Cookie Pusher (FSO)
The Cookie Pusher (FSO)
The Cultural Imperialist (female FSO)
The Davis Family Adventures (EFM)
The Dinoia Family (DS EFM w/kids)
The DipNotes (FS tandem)
The Dubinsky's Travels (female AID FSO/EFM)
The Embassy Crowd (EFM)
The FS Rookie (FSO)
The girl behind her diplomat (EFM)
The Grand Adventures of C and D Randazzo (EFM)
The Haiti Years (male EFM)
The Hegemonist (FSO)
The Hoosier Cable (FSO)
The Hughes Nughes (FSO/EFM)
The Kathmandu Diaries (FSO)
The Kern Family (EFM)
The Khaki Diplomat (FSO)
The Langleys (EFM)
The Last 3 Feet (female FSO)
The Life Diplomatic (FSO)
The Maguire Wire (FSO and EFM w/kids)
The Mas Alla (FSO/EFM)
The McGee Family
The McNabb Clan (USAID EFM w/kids)
The Navigator (FSO)
The Ohio Diplomat (FSO/EFM)
The OpSec Blog (DS)
The Oyster (EFM)
The Partition (FSO)
The Perlman Update (DS EFM w/kids)
The Ralles Adventure (EFM)
The Red Menace Abroad (female FSO)
The Rhodes Family Update (EFM)
The Road to the Foreign Service
The Ronin Road (FSO)
the slow move east (female FSO)
The State of our Family (EFM)
The Stone Rabbit (EFM w/kids)
The Taylors' Travels (FSO/EFM)
The Travelling Rubeshes (FSO/EFM)
the uncommon life (FSO)
The Vegan Diplomat (female FSO)
The Wandering Drays (EFM w/kids)
The Warpiper (FSO)
The Way I See Things (female FSO)
The World That We Live In (EFM)
The Year of Living Unpredicatably (female FSO)
there is fun to be done (EFM)
There Lies the Port (female FSO)
This Way to Somewhere (EFM w/kids)
Throwing Off The Bowlines (FSO)
Trailing Husband (male EFM)
Trailing Male (male EFM)
Trailing Spouses (EFM)
Travel Orders (female FSO/male EFM)
Travel Tales (FSO)
Tuk and Tam (EFM)
Tulip Girl (EFM)
Tumbleweeds (FSO?)
Tutu Diplomat (female FSO)
Two Crabs (FSO)
Two Red Marys and a Yellow Rose (female FSO)
Tyker Girl (EFM w/kids)
Uncertainty Can Be Happiness (FSO)
V is for Vonhinken (FSO)
Verdant Voyages (EFM w/kids)
Viajes y pensamientos (FSO)
Vice Consul (FSO)
Victory is mine! (FSO)
Wallingford Worldwide (male EFM)
Wanderings of a Cheerful Stoic (female FSO)
Watermarked Walls (female FSO)
We Are Alive, Mom (FSO and EFM)
we be rolling stones (same-sex FSO/EFM)
Weebles Kabul But They Don't Fall Down (female FSO)
well, that was different (EFM)
Whales Ears and Other Wonderings (EFM w/kids)
What Were We Thinking? (FSO and EFM)
Where in the World Am I? (EFM)
Where in the World is Doug? (FSO)
Where in The World Is Jamie?? (female FSO)
Where in the World is Luca Galeno? (EFM w/child)
Where in the World is Zehra? (FSO)
Where to Next? (Now with Baby Baggage) (EFM w/kids)
White Waters & Black (FSO)
Wife Mommy Woman (EFM w/kids)
Wingtips on the Ground (FSO)
wontbeatbarcabutilltry (female FSO)
WoodLand Travels (USAID)
World Adventurers (FSO)
World Craft (FSS)
World Wide Matel (FSO)
Worldwide Availability (FSO)
Worldwide Available (USAID)
Worldwide Dave (FSO)
Writing the World (FSO)
Ya' Gotta be Kiddin' Me (female FSO)
Yo Ali (FSS)
You Can Call Me Al (FSO)
You Can't Get There From Here (FSO)
Your Bottoms Make Me Foggy (female FSO)
yrstruly (female FSO)
Zvirzdin's at Large (FSO)
More FS Blogs
365 Bad Days (EFM on UT)
A Different Perspective (EFM)
A Diplomat in the Deccan (female CG at Hyderabad Consulate)
Abu Halen: Expatriate Dad and Mom Tell Tales of Good Times (FSO/EFM)
Adventures in the Foreign Service (female FSO/RPCV)
Adventures in...various nouns and gerunds (EFM)
Adventures of a Diplomatic Family (EFM)
All Aboard the Crazy Bus (FSO)
All Points Forward (FSO)
Ambfso (FSO)
Arriaga's Adventures (FSS)
Collecting Postcards (female FSO/RPCV)
Compass and Companion (EFM w/kids)
Diplomatic Impunity (EFM)
Diplomats In The Mist (FSO)
Diplomistan (female FSO)
Driving to Guam (male EFM)
Durian Days (EFM)
Expeditionary Diplomats (FSO)
Five Gs (EFM w/kids)
Foreign Service IMS (FSS)
Foreign Service Test (FSO)
Foreign Service Thurows (FSO - private blog)
French Fry Diplomacy (FSS)
Frequent Flyer McGuires (FSO)
Global Adventure Seekers (FSO)
Hardship Homemaking (female FSO)
Hello Talalay (female FSO and male EFM)
Home is where the HHE is (FSO)
How The Heck Did We Get Here? (EFM)
How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us (female FSO w/kids)
In Search of the End of the Sidewalk (EFM)
Journey (female FSO)
Kaitlinfso's blog (female FSO)
La Vie Overseas (EFM)
LaDipla (female FSO)
Leastinterestingblog (FSO)
Life Unexpected (EFM w/kinds)
Like nomads, but with more stuff (tandem couple w/kids)
M's Adventures (EFM)
Many Hemispheres (EFM)
Me, A Kid in the World (FS kid)
Mom Is Multitasking (female FSO of tandem)
Mom2nomads (EFM)
Most Eligible Family (EFM)
Of Elephants and Castles (female FSO/male EFM)
Ongoing Adventures (FSS)
Pryor Adventures (EFM w/kids)
S as in Smylie (EFM w/kids)
Schlink Attack! (female FSO)
Scribble Babble (EFM)
Semicolon Memoirs (same-sex EFM)
Service Centered (FSO)
Simple but Hard (EFM)
Sir Winston The Intrepid (EFM)
SpouseAbroad (EFM)
Stateless Machine (FSS)
Tabbies in Tow (female FSO)
Texpatica (female FSO)
The (No Longer) Freelancing Researcher (FSO)
The Accidental Diplomat (female FSO)
The Ashinator Abroad (female FSO)
The Chao Family Adventure (EFM)
The Dispatch (EFM)
The Global Fork (EFM)
The New Diplomat's Wife (EFM)
Three Vicks Abroad (EFM)
Towels Packed, Will Travel (FSO)
Transgender in State (FSO)
Travel Orders (tandem FSOs)
Tuk y Tam (tandem)
Way Off Base (DoD EFM)
Where in the World is Jennifer Santiago? (female FSO)
Wild Thoughts From Wild Places (EFM)
Future FSOs and FSSs
Around the World and Back Again
Brussels Spouts
Consular World
Flossing Around the Mulberry Bush
Future Diplomat
I'll Take Mine...To Go, Please!
Mission: Foreign Service
My Road to the Foreign Service
Oh...the Possibilities!
On my way to the foreign service...
The Schip Family
Wandering Browncoat
Whit's Worldwide Wa/onderings
Other Interesting Links
Adventures in Bureaucracy
AMERICAblog
AMERICAblog Gay
American Diplomacy
American Footprints
Anti-Gay Lies and Liars
Avuncular American
Career Diplomacy
Carolina Friends of the Foreign Service
Citizen Diplomats
Council on Foreign Relations
Damn You, Auto Correct! (because its funny)
Democracy Arsenal
Dip to Dip
DIPNOTE
Diversity DiaBLOGues (intranet only)
Foreign Policy in Focus
Foreign Policy Passport
Foreign Policy Watch
Foreign Service Blogregator
Foreign Service Family Member e-Entrepreneur
FSOT Forums
GLIFAA
Holy Bullies and Headless Monsters
IntLawGrrls
Jerusalem Blog
MountainRunner
PetTravel blog
PetTravel.com
Public Diplomacy
Public Diplomacy Press and Blog Review Version 2.0
Rethinking National Security
State Department Blogs (intranet only)
State Department Social Media Hub (intranet only)
Tales from a Small Planet
The New Civil Rights Movement
TheBloggess (you might pee yourself)
U.S. Department of State
U.S. Department of State - Careers
U.S. Diplomacy
Undiplomatic
USC Center for Public Diplomacy Press and Blog Review
WhirledView
Young Professionals in Foreign Policy Blog
Followers
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