WELCOME TO CHATEAU DU MER BEACH RESORT

If this is your first time in my site, welcome! Chateau Du Mer is a beach house and a Conference Hall. The beach house could now accommodate 10 guests, six in the main floor and four in the first floor( air conditioned room). In addition, you can now reserve your vacation dates ahead and pay the rental fees via PayPal. I hope to see you soon in Marinduque- Home of the Morions and Heart of the Philippines. The photo above was taken during our first Garden Wedding ceremony at The Chateau Du Mer Gardens. I have also posted my favorite Filipino and American dishes and recipes in this site. Some of the photos and videos on this site, I do not own, but I have no intention on the infringement of your copyrights!

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands
View of Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands-Click on photo to link to Marinduque Awaits You

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

The Global Landscape of Homosexuality: Progress, Backlash, and Hope

This blog is inspired from the recent celebration of Pride Month here in San Francisco. 


🌈 The Global Landscape of Homosexuality: Progress, Backlash, and Hope

In 2025, the global status of homosexuality is a complex tapestry of progress, pushback, resilience, and evolving public attitudes. While the LGBTQ+ community has made significant legal and cultural gains in many parts of the world, in other regions, homosexuality remains stigmatized, criminalized, or violently persecuted. Understanding this landscape is vital for appreciating the rights won—and recognizing how much remains at stake.

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ United States: A Nation Divided by Politics, United by Visibility

In the United States, same-sex marriage has been legal nationwide since 2015, and protections for LGBTQ+ individuals continue to expand in many states. Cultural visibility of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people is at an all-time high—reflected in entertainment, politics, and corporate policies. Pride celebrations draw millions, and younger generations largely support LGBTQ+ rights.

However, this progress faces growing opposition in conservative states. Anti-LGBTQ+ legislation, particularly targeting transgender youth, has surged. Book bans, drag show restrictions, and debates over school curricula reflect a larger “culture war” that has brought queer identities into political crossfire. Still, federal legal protections—such as those from the Supreme Court ruling in Bostock v. Clayton County (2020), which extended civil rights to LGBTQ+ employees—remain intact, although vulnerable to future challenges.

Public Sentiment: As of 2025, about 71% of Americans support same-sex marriage, according to Pew Research, and a majority believe LGBTQ+ people should be protected from discrimination. Yet, acceptance varies significantly based on region, religion, and political affiliation.


🌍 Around the World: A Mixed Picture

Globally, the status of homosexuality ranges from full legal equality to capital punishment. Here’s a snapshot:

🟒 Countries with Strong Protections and Visibility

  • Western Europe: Countries like Germany, Spain, the Netherlands, and the Nordic nations lead in LGBTQ+ rights, with strong anti-discrimination laws, marriage equality, and widespread social acceptance.

  • Canada, Australia, New Zealand: These countries have inclusive laws, vibrant LGBTQ+ cultures, and government support for Pride and community initiatives.

  • South America: Nations like Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, and Uruguay have legalized same-sex marriage and protect LGBTQ+ rights, despite lingering social conservatism in some areas.

🟑 Countries with Partial Rights or Social Tensions

  • Asia: Taiwan remains a standout as the first country in Asia to legalize same-sex marriage. Thailand recently legalized it in 2025. Japan has local-level recognition but no national law yet. Meanwhile, India decriminalized homosexuality in 2018, yet marriage and adoption rights are still denied.

  • Africa: South Africa remains a bright spot with constitutional protections and marriage equality, but most other African nations maintain harsh laws. Ghana and Uganda have passed strict anti-LGBTQ+ laws in recent years, sparking international condemnation.

  • Middle East: Most countries criminalize homosexuality, often harshly. However, quiet underground communities and advocacy efforts persist in places like Lebanon and Israel (where LGBTQ+ rights are more advanced than its neighbors).

πŸ”΄ Nations with Criminalization or Violence

In over 60 countries, homosexuality is still criminalized, and in several—including Iran, Saudi Arabia, and parts of Nigeria—same-sex acts are punishable by death. LGBTQ+ individuals in these regions live with the constant threat of violence, arrest, or social ostracization. Advocacy work continues, but it's often done quietly and at great personal risk.


🌐 The Internet and Global Visibility

Social media and digital activism have transformed how LGBTQ+ people connect worldwide. Online platforms offer education, visibility, and support for queer youth, especially in countries where homosexuality is illegal or frowned upon. However, these same tools have also been used to surveil, harass, and entrap LGBTQ+ individuals, particularly under authoritarian regimes.


 Challenges and the Road Ahead

As the world navigates political upheavals, rising nationalism, and cultural shifts, LGBTQ+ rights remain a litmus test for human rights and democratic values. The battle is far from over. In many countries, the fight is not just for acceptance—but for survival.

The current global climate teaches us a crucial lesson: progress is never guaranteed. It must be defended, extended, and adapted to local contexts. While love may be universal, the right to express it freely remains uneven.


Final Thought:
Whether in rainbow-filled streets of San Francisco or hidden networks in repressive societies, the spirit of Pride endures. It is not just about celebration—it is about resistance, remembrance, and the relentless pursuit of equality.

Meanwhile, Donald Trump's presidency (2017–2025) had a complex and often contradictory relationship with LGBTQ rights. While he occasionally made statements that seemed supportive, his administration enacted or supported numerous policies that rolled back protections for LGBTQ individuals—particularly transgender people. Here’s a summary of the key attitudes and actions:

✅ What the Trump Administration Claimed Publicly

  • Early promises: In 2016, Trump said he would be a “friend” to the LGBTQ community and was the first Republican nominee to mention LGBTQ rights in his nomination speech.

  • Orlando Pulse shooting reference: He invoked the 2016 shooting at an LGBTQ nightclub as evidence that he would protect the community from terrorism.


❌ Key Actions that Undermined LGBTQ Rights

1. Transgender Military Ban

  • In 2017, Trump announced via Twitter that transgender individuals would no longer be allowed to serve in the U.S. military, reversing Obama-era policy.

  • The ban went into effect in 2019, despite legal challenges.

2. Rolling Back Healthcare Protections

  • His administration removed anti-discrimination protections for transgender people under the Affordable Care Act, narrowing the definition of sex discrimination.

3. Title IX Changes

  • The Department of Education, under Betsy DeVos, reversed Obama-era guidance that protected transgender students in schools, particularly concerning bathroom access and gender identity recognition.

4. Religious Freedom over LGBTQ Rights

  • Issued rules expanding “religious freedom” protections, which were used by some institutions to deny services to LGBTQ individuals (e.g., adoption agencies refusing same-sex couples).

5. Support for Supreme Court Nominees Opposed to LGBTQ Protections

  • Appointed justices (Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, Barrett) with records or affiliations suggesting a conservative stance on LGBTQ issues—although Gorsuch surprisingly wrote the opinion in Bostock v. Clayton County affirming Title VII protections for LGBTQ workers.


⚖️ Neutral or Mixed Actions

  • Trump appointed Richard Grenell, an openly gay man, as acting Director of National Intelligence, the highest-ranking openly LGBTQ official in U.S. history at that time.

  • Grenell led a U.S. campaign to decriminalize homosexuality abroad, but critics saw this as symbolic and inconsistent with domestic policies.


🏳️‍🌈 Community and Advocacy Group Response

  • Most major LGBTQ advocacy organizations, such as the Human Rights Campaign and GLAAD, were critical of the Trump administration, maintaining LGBTQ people were “under attack.”

  • GLAAD tracked over 200 actions they viewed as anti-LGBTQ during Trump’s tenure.


🧾 Summary

CategoryTrump’s Actions/Attitudes
Public StatementsOccasionally supportive
Transgender RightsSeverely rolled back (military, healthcare, education)
LGBTQ HealthcareProtections reduced
Religious FreedomPrioritized over anti-discrimination for LGBTQ people
AppointmentsMixed (e.g., Grenell vs. conservative judges)
Global LGBTQ AdvocacySymbolic push to decriminalize homosexuality abroad

Deregulation and Dollars: Inside the Trump Administration’s Bold AI Agenda

Federal AI Plan Targets 'Burdensome' State Regulations
This article is inspired by my readings from previous issues of the Wall Street Journal. On the August 20th issue, there was an article on the goals of The Trump Administration on AI technology and development and Extra Funding and Deregulation.  

Here's a blog post on this topic for your reading pleasure and information. 
Trump Administration Pledges to Stimulate AI Use and Exports

Below is my blog post inspired by recent media coverage (in The Guardian and The Wall Street Journal) about the Trump administration’s AI ambitions and accompanying funding strategies:


Deregulation and Dollars: Inside the Trump Administration’s Bold AI Agenda

Introduction

In recent weeks, the Trump administration has rolled out a sweeping AI strategy—an “America’s AI Action Plan”—designed to secure U.S. technological supremacy. While framed as a bold vision for innovation and infrastructure, the plan raises pressing questions about its reliance on deregulation, corporate self-interest, and long-term sustainability.


Deregulation on the Front Lines

A centerpiece of the AI Action Plan, unveiled in July 2025, is a sweeping push to dismantle regulatory barriers. The administration has directed federal agencies—like the FTC and FCC—to eliminate any rules perceived as impediments to AI development, including those limiting data center construction or energy access. It also signals intent to withhold federal tech funding from states with “burdensome” AI laws, effectively penalizing jurisdictional efforts at consumer protection or algorithmic accountability Wall Street Journal+1.

Moreover, a prepared executive order seeks to ban government contracts for so-called “woke” AI—forcing political neutrality in models used by federal contractors and reinforcing the administration’s broader deregulation agenda Wall Street Journal.


Infrastructural Ambition: Building the American AI Ecosystem

The administration isn’t stopping at rules — infrastructure is central to its strategy. Key components include:

  • Data Centers & Energy Facilities
    Leveraging federal lands and fast-tracking permitting processes to build AI-ready infrastructure with minimal bureaucratic friction Wall Street Journal+1.

  • Pennsylvania AI Hub
    Tens of billions pledged from companies—Google and Blackstone each at $25B, $6 B from CoreWeave, plus Amazon’s $20 B project—alongside energy investments in fossil and nuclear capacity. These commitments aim to establish Pennsylvania as a premier AI and energy nexus Wall Street Journal.

  • International Tech Exports
    The plan deploys tools like the Export-Import Bank to ensure that AI systems built abroad rely on U.S. chips and models, strengthening America’s role in global AI ecosystems Wall Street Journal.

Tech industry figures are enthusiastic—CEOs from Nvidia and AMD lauded the plan for its emphasis on deregulation, infrastructure, and export flexibility, seeing it as essential to “run fast” in the global AI race Wall Street Journal.


The Funding Paradox: Promises vs. Pipeline

Yet, beneath the fanfare lies a troubling contradiction. Experts warn that simultaneous funding cuts to key research agencies—NIH, NSF, DARPA, and NASA—undermine the very ecosystem that made AI breakthroughs possible. These agencies not only drive foundational advances (e.g., in computer vision, AlphaFold, and even the AI safety firm Anthropic) but also cultivate the academic talent pipeline feeding Silicon Valley The Guardian.

In short, the plan is rich in infrastructure promises and deregulation rhetoric—but may fall short on sustaining the basic research and diverse expertise necessary for long-term technological leadership.


Final Word: Unleashed Innovation—or Risky Deregulation?

The Trump administration’s AI strategy is unapologetically ambitious: it calls for dismantling red tape, scaling up physical infrastructure, and exporting American AI globally. But critics warn this “fast-lane” approach may prioritize short-term gains over ethical safeguards, environmental sustainability, and sustained innovation. As one commentator put it, deregulated growth without robust oversight is more likely to yield corporate dominance—not a golden age of human flourishing San Francisco Chronicle.


Meanwhile, here’s a deeper discussion on three angles : environmental implications, state reactions, and how the plan compares with prior U.S. AI eras.

Deregulate, Build, and Go Big: The Trump AI Plan’s Environmental Footprint, State Pushback, and Historical Context

The Trump Administration’s America’s AI Action Plan prioritizes rapid build-out of data centers, lighter-touch rules, and export promotion—while signaling cuts or conditions on federal funds for states with “burdensome” AI laws. That acceleration has real environmental trade-offs (power and water), has sparked state-level resistance, and marks a sharp pivot from the safety-and-standards emphasis of the Biden years and the research-centric groundwork of the Obama era. The White HouseWall Street Journal


1) Environmental implications: power, water, siting

Runaway electricity demand. The International Energy Agency projects global electricity use from data centers could more than double by 2030 (≈945 TWh), with AI as the biggest driver—meaning more generation, transmission, and cooling capacity must come online fast. Inference (everyday AI use) will dominate demand, not just model training. IEA

Local water stress. AI data centers draw significant water directly (on-site cooling) and indirectly (power generation). Bloomberg’s 2025 analysis highlights rising conflicts in water-scarce regions as AI buildouts scale. Expect heightened scrutiny over siting in drought-prone basins and calls for dry or hybrid cooling and recycled water mandates. Bloomberg.com

Grid constraints and “energy first” siting. Even outside the U.S., recent reporting underscores the bottleneck: utilities and planners are warning that AI growth outpaces current grid capacity. The message generalizes—projects will cluster near firm, affordable power (nuclear, hydro, gas) and robust transmission. That favors regions with permitting speed, existing substations, and dispatchable generation. TechRadarThe Times

What the federal plan adds. The Trump blueprint leans into fast-tracking data-center construction and promoting AI exports, implying federal support to unlock sites, energy, and permits quickly—potentially with less environmental review friction. That accelerates supply but shifts more responsibility for impacts to local regulators unless federal conditions are attached. Wall Street Journal

Bottom line on environment: Expect more pressure on power (peak capacity & transmission), water (especially summer peaks), and land-use reviews. Regions that pair firm clean power (nuclear/hydro), non-potable cooling, and grid upgrades will win the next wave—others face delays or public pushback. IEABloomberg.com


2) State reactions: preemption by purse strings—and the pushback

Funding leverage over state laws. The AI Action Plan tells agencies not to direct AI-related federal funding to states with “burdensome” AI regulations—a de-facto soft preemption strategy after congressional efforts to outright freeze state AI laws stalled. States and cities see this as Washington penalizing local guardrails on safety, privacy, labor, and consumer protection. The White HouseStateScoop

What states are doing anyway.

  • Colorado enacted a comprehensive, risk-based Colorado AI Act (SB 205) targeting “high-risk” systems (effective 2026), with duties for both developers and deployers. Colorado General AssemblyAmerican Bar Association

  • California vetoed its high-profile SB 1047 in 2024 but advanced other AI measures and commissioned a 2025 report urging “trust-but-verify” safety mechanisms—signaling Sacramento isn’t out of the game. Perkins CoieDavis Wright TremaineTIME

  • Other states (e.g., Illinois) continue to regulate specific uses (like banning AI for psychotherapy), suggesting a patchwork will persist despite federal pressure. StateScoop

Why this matters for companies. The federal plan reduces predictability: incentives to site in “friendly” states versus potential compliance requirements in stringent states. For multi-state operators, this means dual planning—one track for federal grants and export support, another for state-level risk management to keep products deployable nationwide. The White House


3) How this compares with previous U.S. AI eras

Obama (2016): research first, convene, and plan.
The White House OSTP produced foundational reports—“Preparing for the Future of AI” and the National AI R&D Strategic Plan—to seed research agendas, workforce prep, and early governance ideas. Emphasis: public R&D, standards work, and listening sessions. whitehouse.govnitrd.gov

Trump (2019, first term): American AI Initiative.
EO 13859 focused on maintaining U.S. leadership via federal R&D prioritization, data and compute access, and workforce development—light on regulation, heavy on innovation messaging. Today’s 2025 plan extends that deregulatory posture, adds hard infrastructure acceleration, and uses funding leverage against restrictive state lawsTrump White House ArchivesGovInfoThe White House

Biden (2023): safety, standards, and governance.
The Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy AI Executive Order leaned into model reporting, testing, content provenance, worker protections, and a central role for NIST’s AI Risk Management Framework (AI RMF 1.0). It framed a risk-based approach and built voluntary/agency standards many firms adopted. The White HouseFederal RegisterNIST

Trump (2025, current plan): speed, exports, and preemption-by-funding.
Compared to Biden, today’s plan de-emphasizes federal safety mandates, stresses permitting speed, data-center buildout, and export tools, and seeks to discourage strict state laws via the federal purse. Historically, that’s a pivot from standards-first to infrastructure-and-industry-first. Wall Street JournalThe White House


Sources & Further Reading

The Filipino Town in Los Angeles, California

From My Readings of Filipino-American History this Week - The Largest Filipino-American Monument in the U.S. Is in Los Angeles

The 30-foot tall gateway now towers over Beverly Boulevard.
IMAGE PHOTO: YOUTUBE/LA THIS WEEK 
The next time you visit Los Angeles, you shouldn't miss the chance to take a closer look at the largest Filipino-American monument in the United States. Don't worry, we reckon you're probably not going to miss this 30-foot-tall landmark when you're in the area.
"Talang Gabay - Our Guiding Star" happens to be the name of the new Historic Filipinotown Eastern Gateway. Its unveiling coincided with the celebration of Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month last April.

The gateway spans 82 feet over the boulevard entrance into the Filipinotown neighborhood and is said to be a tribute to the invaluable contributions of Filipino-Americans to the city.

For the landmark's design, the officials tapped Filipino-American artists Eliseo Art Silva and Celestino Geronimo Jr. As seen in the details, we can see they added cultural symbols like the parol, gumamela, and the iconic Sarimanok.

According to Los Angeles City Councilman Mitch O'Farrell, the construction of the monument comes with an initial commitment of $152,000 (or P7,975,895) in city funds for the project. The city had then allotted an additional $452,000 (or P23,721,383) for the landmark after cost saving.

It took almost 20 years for the monument to be delivered to the public and Filipinotown. Even current Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, who used to be a council member when the idea for the gateway was first conceived, supported the construction of the monument.

In his speech during the ribbon-cutting ceremony, the Los Angeles Mayor said, "This isn't just a big day for Historic Filipinotown or Hi-Fi, as some people call it, but for our City of Angels as well, because we celebrate all of our diversity."

Filipino-Americans have become the largest Asian-American population in California, as per a 2010 Census. About 43 percent of the Filipino-American population in the U.S. reside in the state. Filipinotown in Los Angeles is also home to about 500,000 people of Filipino descent.

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