VOYA Responds

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Saundra,

Thank you for your detailed, thoughtful response to our invitation to have this dialogue.  Your commitment to fair, balanced, and unbiased reviews for LGBTQA+ young adults is evident and much appreciated.

We see the damaging flaws in our reviews that you have pointed out. Your comments are absolutely correct, and we are sincerely sorry for any hurt or censorship we have caused among our readers, the young adults they serve, and our friends and families in LGBTQA+ communities. Our editor in chief and reviews editor have begun training on LGBTQA+ sensitivity (with GLAAD, Heartland Trans* Wellness Group, and other online resources, and through direct communication with LGBTQA+ advocates) and are sharing this training with our writers and reviewers on an on-going basis. Both editors are aware of the importance of this training and have made it a priority to continuously seek out resources for increasing sensitivity to all of the diverse communities VOYA serves.

We are incorporating many of the thoughtful comments we have received into our updated editorial and review guidelines. Updated review guidelines will be posted on our website in the next couple days, and sent via individual emails to each member of the VOYAreview team. The emails will include your review examples and critiques as examples of what all future VOYA reviews will avoid (and why). The updated editorial and review guidelines will include your suggested links, as well as links to other resources.

VOYA strives to serve the needs of our readership in ways that are useful, immediately employable, and representative of the many different young adults they serve. We are committed to moving forward with our expanded awareness. We extend our sincere gratitude to you (and so many others) for helping us become aware of the issues we were unaware of before, and the errors we have made that we did not see. Your contribution to VOYA and our readers, and particularly to the young adults they serve, will be immeasurable as wecontinue to grow in our mission to advocate for all young adults in a responsible, respectful, and representative manner.

Sincerely,

VOYA Magazine

Once More, Never Again

Last Friday, my wife decided to take my daughter to a Pride Skate at a local roller rink. I was surprised, because that particular rink is smack in the middle of an intensely religious, heavily armed part of town– in a town that has spent the last several years fighting vociferously to deny queer people civil rights.

So when my wife said, hey, we’re going to this Pride skate, my first thought was not “Have fun.” It was “Maybe you should stay home.”

Because my first thought was– what if someone with a gun and something to prove shows up? I was anxious the entire time they were gone. I talked to my best friend online to distract me, but I couldn’t relax until they got home. Fortunately for my immediate family, my wife and my daughter had a great time at Pride Skate, and came home unscathed.

Last night, more than a hundred people went to a Pride celebration in Orlando. They did not come home unscathed. Half of them will never come home. Half of them linger in hospitals. These members of my queer family did nothing more radical than exist. 

And now, because we live in a country where our elected leaders actively encourage people to believe that some lives are worth more than others– that in fact, some lives should be invalidated completely– fifty people were murdered. More than fifty more will spend the rest of their lives recovering emotionally and physically (and no doubt struggling financially because of the care they will require.)

And why? Because one man was encouraged by Donald Trump, and Ted Cruz and Paul Ryan, and every senator and representative, every lobbyist and media outlet who amplified their voices, to hate. Because one man was told over and over that queer people are less than, that they are frightening, that they corrupt children simply by existing. Because this one man believed every word from the pulpit and the pundits claiming that the mere existence of queer people is harmful.

One man saw two men kissing last week, and was so enraged that last night, he murdered fifty. He maimed fifty more.

So if you thought that the battle for marriage equality was the end, this is the reminder that it was only the beginning.

If you thought that everything is good and right and easy in the world for queer people, this is your reminder that it is not. If you thought the closet– constructed around us before we even realize our own true selves– was a thing of the past, this is your reminder that it is not.

If you thought that the closet was a neutral choice, with no meaning to it, this is your reminder that it is not. If you believe that there is no fundamental difference between Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders or Hillary Clinton, this is your wake up call.

Queer people existing is still, in 2016, a radical act. Voting, in 2016, is a radical act. So I’m begging you– be a radical in 2016. Be a radical in November. Be the radical who replies to the people who spread fear and hate by cutting off their platform. The presidential nominee who hates– be a radical, silence him. Silence the representatives and the senators with your votes.

You can be in the room where it happens. You can. I’m talking to you.

Thoughts and prayers are no longer enough. Be a radical in 2016. Vote. Vote. VOTE.