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Dustin Lance Black, Sean Penn Hit Back as Navy Ship Is Stripped of Harvey Milk's Name: 'These Guys Are Idiots' (Exclusive)

Dustin Lance Black, Sean Penn Hit Back as Navy Ship Is Stripped of Harvey Milk's Name: 'These Guys Are Idiots' (Exclusive)

Yahooa day ago

Dustin Lance Black and Sean Penn, who won Academy Awards for writing and starring in the 2008 Harvey Milk biopic Milk, are speaking out on orders from U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to remove the name of the gay rights activist and late San Francisco Supervisor from a Navy ship.
'This is yet another move to distract and to fuel the culture wars that create division,' Black, 50, says in a phone call with The Hollywood Reporter. 'It's meant to get us to react in ways that are self-centered so that we are further distanced from our brothers and sisters in equally important civil rights fights in this country. It's divide and conquer.'
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Adds Penn, 64, in an email to THR: 'I've never before seen a Secretary of Defense so aggressively demote himself to the rank of Chief PETTY Officer.'
News of the renaming of the USNS Harvey Milk, christened in San Diego in 2021, came through the leak of an internal memo on Tuesday. The Pentagon's chief spokesperson later confirmed that the renaming 'will be announced after internal reviews are complete.'
Issued by Navy secretary John Phelan, the memo stated other potential ships currently being reviewed for renaming include ones bearing the monickers of civil rights icons like Thurgood Marshall, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Harriet Tubman and Cesar Chavez.
'Secretary Hegseth is committed to ensuring that the names attached to all DOD installations and assets are reflective of the commander in chief's priorities, our nation's history and the warrior ethos,' the Pentagon said in a statement.
'These guys are idiots,' Black responds. 'Pete Hegseth does not seem like a smart man, a wise man, a knowledgeable man. He seems small and petty. I would love to introduce him to some LGBTQ folks who are warriors who have had to be warriors our entire life just to live our lives openly as who we are.'
Black shot to international attention after Milk, helmed by Gus Van Sant, became a critical and commercial darling, winning two Academy Awards — one for Black and one for Sean Penn, who played the title character.
The film begins with Milk's arrival in San Francisco, tracing his political ascendancy as the first out gay man to be elected to public office before being tragically assassinated, along with Mayor George Moscone, by city supervisor Dan White in 1978. White was found guilty of two counts of voluntary manslaughter and served only five years in prison before being released.
'There's a lot that Harvey did before my film fades in,' Black tells THR. 'He worked on Wall Street. He worked on Broadway. He was a school teacher and was in the Navy right here in California. Harvey always excelled at every single thing he did, including his work in the Navy.'
Says Black, 'Harvey said repeatedly, 'This is not about ego, this is about the 'us'-es.' And when he talked about the 'us'-es, it wasn't just gay people. It was racial minorities, ethnic minorities, people who didn't speak English, seniors who couldn't afford rent in the city that they grew up in and are finding themselves homeless at an old age. Union workers, most importantly, who couldn't afford to feed their children and needed a living wage. These were the 'us'-es. This was the coalition.'
'Harvey Milk is an icon, a civil rights icon, and for good reason,' Black continues. 'That's not going to change. Renaming a ship isn't going to change that. If people are pissed off, good, be pissed off — but take the appropriate action. Do what Harvey Milk had said we need to do, and it's about bringing back together the coalition of the 'us'-es that helps move the pendulum of progress forward. Stop the infighting and lock arms again. That's what Harvey would say.'
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O'Leary blasts Canada's 'anti-American rhetoric' - how to hedge against uncertainty

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

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O'Leary blasts Canada's 'anti-American rhetoric' - how to hedge against uncertainty

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Op-Ed: Care For Constituents Or Chaos? Medicaid Cuts Will Devastate All Of Us
Op-Ed: Care For Constituents Or Chaos? Medicaid Cuts Will Devastate All Of Us

Black America Web

time2 hours ago

  • Black America Web

Op-Ed: Care For Constituents Or Chaos? Medicaid Cuts Will Devastate All Of Us

Source: Jemal Countess / Getty In our country, which has so much abundance, poverty shouldn't be a death sentence. However, proposed cuts to Medicaid will cause many individuals, families and communities to suffer for that very reason–poverty. Significant and potentially massive cuts to Medicaid will cause irreparable harm. Shockwaves will reverberate in rural, urban, and suburban communities, and impact individuals, working families, many of our most fragile elderly and our most vulnerable young and disabled. I offer this perspective as a public health practitioner. I have spent my career supporting and advancing health systems in our country, across Louisiana, the Gulf Coast, and in our nation's capital, Washington, D.C., Medicaid supports our workforce and health systems (hospitals and clinics), in addition to individuals, families, and communities Medicaid provides insurance to people with low incomes and people who have disabilities. 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We will see the impacts of this immediately in rural regions with the shuttering of services, significant job losses, and further diminishing already challenged access to care. With health care shortages already existing, our conversations need to be continued around closing the gaps in access, not creating new chasms. Now more than ever, we need our leaders and legislative champions to protect our communities and their health and well-being! Given the adverse impact Medicaid cuts would have on the nation, we need to boldly reject proposals that will weaken the program and impact all of our communities. Given its importance, some may wonder why elected leaders would want to cut the program. Some legislators propose cutting Medicaid as part of a broader plan to give $4.5 trillion in tax cuts. Others want to lower the federal deficit, a $1.1 trillion deficit at the end of February 2025. Policymakers should not attempt to bring down federal spending with ill-conceived strategies that will only add to Americans' suffering. They should instead think strategically about taxation. Legislators can bring a great deal of confidence in their leadership by examining other alternatives to drastic Medicaid cuts, by reminding us that they care for all of their constituents, and that they are creating a vision for a healthier future based on their community's needs—timely doctors' visits, healthy births, high quality mental health care and substance use supports—not disregarding, or even worse targeting the thing that keeps us safe and well. Shelina Davis is the Chief Executive Officer of the Louisiana Public Health Institute. SEE ALSO: 'We All Are Going To Die': Joni Ernst's Chilling Defense Of Medicaid Cuts Sparks Outrage At Iowa Town Hall The Midnight Medicaid Cuts: Why The GOP's Reconciliation Bill Is A Raw Deal For The American People SEE ALSO Op-Ed: Care For Constituents Or Chaos? Medicaid Cuts Will Devastate All Of Us was originally published on Black America Web Featured Video CLOSE

Former White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre Leaves Democratic Party
Former White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre Leaves Democratic Party

Black America Web

time2 hours ago

  • Black America Web

Former White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre Leaves Democratic Party

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