Dr. Kristina Rizzotto

Dr. Kristina Rizzotto The Latvian Brazilian organist 🏳️‍⚧️ kristinarizzotto.com Her compositions have been performed and recorded on all six inhabited continents.

Dr. Kristina Ziema Rizzotto has played concerts in Argentina, Brazil, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, and in 22 American states. Highlights include Rīga Dom Cathedral and Liepāja’s Holy Trinity Cathedral in Latvia; Pelplin Cathedral International Organ Festival in Poland; Piccolo Spoleto Festival in Charleston; Christopher Summer Festival in Vilnius, Lithuania; Basilica of the Blessed Sa

crament in Buenos Aires; Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in Denver; Anchorage Lutheran Church in Alaska; and the American Guild of Organists' OrganFest 2021 at the Cathedral of Saint Paul in Minnesota. For her recent performance at the North Central American Guild of Organists 2023 Regional Convention, she was praised as “an exceptionally strong soloist on the Paulus concerto, making certain to bring a brightness forth amid the orchestra's often dark lines” (Star Tribune). Her compositions and performances have appeared on the nationally syndicated radio program Pipedreams, which reaches a quarter of a million listeners each week. Dr. Rizzotto is also a self-published composer for organ, choir, and piano, with emphasis in sacred repertoire for religious services. Her compositions are available for download at kristinarizzotto.com and she is open for commissions. Dr. Rizzotto was named a member of The Diapason’s 20 Under 30 Class of 2017, which recognizes young leaders in the fields of organ, harpsichord, carillon, and church music. She is the Director of Music at Lake of the Isles Lutheran Church in Minneapolis. She was previously the organist at the Benedictine Abbey of Rio de Janeiro, built in 1590 and home of one of the oldest organs in South America, from 1773. Kristina holds a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in Organ Performance from the University of Oklahoma, a Master of Music in Sacred Music and Organ Performance from East Carolina University, and a Bachelor’s degree in Piano Performance from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (Magna cm Laude). She is grateful for the inspiration of her teachers and mentors, especially Miriam Grosman, Alexandre Rachid, Andrew Scanlon, Mark Taggart, and John Schwandt. Her doctoral dissertation was about the importance of music in the formation of the national identity of the Latvian people, focusing on organ compositions by Aivars Kalējs which represent the values and spirit of the Latvian heritage. Dr. Rizzotto's YouTube channel features nearly 400 organ, piano, and choral recordings which have been viewed over 2 million times. For more information and contact, please visit www.kristinarizzotto.com

It’s the most wonderful time of the year 🥰🏳️‍🌈
06/01/2026

It’s the most wonderful time of the year 🥰🏳️‍🌈

Their obsession is so weird and disturbing
06/01/2026

Their obsession is so weird and disturbing

ETTD
05/31/2026

ETTD

05/31/2026
Since nobody will celebrate me, I’ll celebrate me 🤡
05/31/2026

Since nobody will celebrate me, I’ll celebrate me 🤡

Texas Wants Citizens to Take Pics and Tattle on Trans People Using the BathroomTexas Attorney General Ken Paxton is enco...
05/30/2026

Texas Wants Citizens to Take Pics and Tattle on Trans People Using the Bathroom

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is encouraging the public to help enforce the state’s “bathroom bill” via a tip line for suspected violations of the new law designed to restrict which facilities transgender people can use.

Senate Bill 8, also known as the Texas Women’s Privacy Act, requires government buildings, schools and colleges to restrict access to restrooms and locker rooms based on s*x assigned at birth. If someone does enter the “wrong” bathroom, institutions are punished by the state, with $25,000 first-time fines and $125,000 subsequent penalties per day. Individuals can also sue agencies if they are in a restroom and are “affected” by a violation of the law.

SB 8 tasks Paxton’s office with investigating complaints and proposing penalty amounts, but only after complaints are initially filed with the accused agency. The complaint form requires a copy of the original complaint to the accused institution for any submission.

The form also has an option to submit photos to the tip line, however, taking photos inside a restroom is illegal. In 2023, Williamson County GOP Chair Michelle Evans had her phone confiscated by Department of Public Safety officers and was investigated by Travis County District Attorney Jose Garza after she posted a photo of a trans woman inside a Texas Capitol restroom. Evans sued Garza to stop the investigation, arguing the photo was not an invasion of privacy, but in early December the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against her.

In a statement about the new tip line, Paxton encouraged those who witness violations to use the tip line and said the necessity for SB 8 stems from “radical leftism” and the danger of “mentally ill men.”

“Together, we will uproot and bring justice to any state agency or political subdivision that opens the door for men to violate women’s privacy, dignity, and safety,” Paxton said.

The restrictions have been long-supported by conservative lawmakers and advocates as a way of restricting trans people’s access to facilities, a move they claim protects women in vulnerable spaces. SB 8, however, has no guidance on how to enforce its restrictions, only mandating that institutions take “every reasonable step” to ensure violations don’t occur, which opponents of the law have said is purposefully vague.

Critics of SB 8 have worried that the vague enforcement guidelines may also encourage people to harass or intimidate people in restrooms if they believe someone is in the “wrong” restroom, even in areas the law doesn’t apply.

“The ‘tip line’ wrongly encourages Texans to violate each other’s privacy in bathrooms,” said Brian Klosterboer, senior staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, in a statement. “The Attorney General has tried for years to vilify and dehumanize transgender Texans, but he can’t strip away every person’s right to privacy and right to live our lives free from gender stereotyping.”

In one instance cited during legislative testimony on SB 8, a cisgender teenaged girl was accused of being in the wrong restroom at a Minnesota restaurant and harassed by a server until the girl exposed her breasts. Minnesota does not have a law restricting restrooms to biological s*x, and no bathroom bill in the country, including Texas, applies to private businesses. Advocates allege the animus created by laws like SB 8 caused the incident to occur.

Enforcement across Texas since SB 8 went into effect on Dec. 4 has varied. At the Texas Capitol on Dec. 6, Department of Public Safety officers in one instance blocked the women’s restroom and checked the IDs of protesters attempting to enter.

Source: The Texas Tribune

New trump Administration Rule Aims to Erase Trans People from Many Areas of Public LifeToday, the trump administration r...
05/30/2026

New trump Administration Rule Aims to Erase Trans People from Many Areas of Public Life

Today, the trump administration released a new proposed rule titled “Regulation for Federal Financial Assistance.” The rule, spearheaded by Project 2025 architect Russell Vought’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and published jointly by every federal agency, aims to “ensure that Federal awards and subawards are not used to fund, promote, encourage, subsidize, or facilitate” “’diversity, equity, and inclusion’ (DEI) or ‘diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility’ (DEIA) policies, principles, or practices,” “gender ideology,” and “the so-called ‘transition’ of a child under 19 years of age from one s*x to another.”

In doing so, it will formally codify and broaden the funding prohibitions that were originally established by Executive Orders 14151, 14168, and 14187 in the first few days of Trump’s second term. However, it also directs government agencies not to discriminate against organizations on the basis of their “religious character, affiliation, exercise, or lack thereof,” which legalizes anti-LGBTQ+ discrimination in some contexts. And even worse, it repeals the Biden-era rule mandating that recipients of federal funding not discriminate on the basis of s*xual orientation or gender identity if they are subject to federal discrimination law. These changes are planned to take effect by October 1st.

Make no mistake: this proposal is extremely destructive. The regulation in question, 2 CFR 200.300, governs virtually all federal funding awards, which, as per 31 U.S.C. § 6401, include “the transfer of anything of value for a public purpose of support or stimulation authorized by a law of the United States, including financial assistance and Government facilities, services, and property” as well as “a grant, a subgrant, a cooperative agreement, or any other transaction” outside of government loans, insurance, and subsidies. In practical terms, this encompasses state & local governments, universities, K-12 schools, healthcare providers, research institutions, non-profit organizations, museums, public libraries, many private businesses, and more.

Seemingly the most straightforward of the three prohibitions is the one on DEI. According to the rule, it’s meant to ban funding from going towards supporting “racial preferences or other forms of racial discrimination used by the recipient or subrecipient that violate any applicable Federal anti-discrimination laws, including activities where race or intentional proxies for race will be used as a selection criterion for employment or program participation.” Read plainly, this is primarily meant to target DEI hiring practices and some cultural programs as well as to eliminate federal grants that are intended for minorities.

However, the second provision — the ban on ‘gender ideology’ — is much more vague. It directly relies on EO 14168, which defines the ‘gender ideology’ as “[replacing] the biological category of s*x with an ever-shifting concept of self-assessed gender identity, permitting the false claim that males can identify as and thus become women and vice versa, and requiring all institutions of society to regard this false claim as true.” In the rule, this is expanded to also include “theories or ideologies that deny the biological reality of s*x or the s*x binary in humans, or endorse or advocate for the notion that s*x is a chosen or mutable characteristic.”

And in its policies, the trump administration has already interpreted gender ideology extremely broadly, construing it to mean any acknowledgement of trans people in virtually any capacity. Because of this, his government has stopped enforcing federal gender identity discrimination protections, removed all mention of ‘gender identity,’ ‘transgender,’ and even just ‘gender’ from all federal regulations and rules, implemented a bathroom ban in federal buildings, cut gender-affirming care from federal employee insurance plans, banned gender changes on passports, updated federal forms, and tortured trans prisoners, among other things.

As a funding ban, this gets more complicated. The language used — ”fund, promote, encourage, subsidize, or facilitate” — significantly expands EO 14168’s ban on funds directly being used to ‘promote’ gender ideology, and it provides the trump administration with extensive authority to condition funding. This is especially true given the inclusion of the word ‘facilitate,’ which has been used to justify broad enforcement action against trans people by figures like Texas AG Ken Paxton.

So, for example, if a federally funded high school mentions trans people in lessons, and if the school cannot operate without that funding, is that funding ‘facilitating’ ‘gender ideology’? How about if a federally-funded museum organizes a pride display? Or if a city flies a pride flag at a building that receives federal funds? Or if a university funds research into gender-affirming care? These remain open questions, and that’s a problem. As has already happened with many colleges and youth gender-affirming care providers, entities afraid of losing their funding will likely overcomply in advance.

As a result, trans people will be erased from many areas. American research into trans healthcare may stop almost entirely. Many museums and libraries could drop any mention of trans people. City governments might stop celebrating pride and repeal nondiscrimination ordinances. Larger advocacy organizations may stop addressing the needs of the trans community. And across the board, many entities will likely implement the DOJ’s bathroom guidance, which states that failing to segregate bathrooms by ‘biological s*x’ violates federal discrimination laws. Worse, because the rule would also give the existing funding bans more teeth, compliance with those narrower provisions — which some entities have avoided thus far — will become the new bare minimum.

Another big question mark is Medicaid, which is a joint state-federal program that provides health insurance for lower-income Americans. Unlike some other federal funding that is sent to states, funding for Medicaid is considered a federal award, and as a result, it’s possible that the federal government may use this rule to condition that this funding is not spent on gender-affirming care. If this occurs, it’s entirely possible that the handful of GOP-led states that do cover this care — Georgia, Indiana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, and Utah — will use this to justify ending their coverage. In fact, in the past few years, many states, including Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Montana, Ohio, and Wyoming, have already done so as a result of similar political pressure.

Unfortunately, this idea isn’t entirely out of the question. The third provision, the ban on funds being used for gender-affirming care for minors, is the most similar to existing prohibitions. Over the past 16 months, the Trump administration has threatened providers’ entire funding streams over providing this care and has justified doing so through similar language — “fund, sponsor, promote, assist, or support.” At the very least, this rule will likely bar the states that do cover gender-affirming care for minors through Medicaid and another similar program, CHIP, from using federal funds for that purpose.

To justify these broad anti-trans funding conditions, the Trump administration wrote that “divisive gender ideologies…harm women, have a corrosive effect on public trust in Federal grantmaking agencies, infringe on religious liberties, and fall outside of specifically enumerated purposes of authorizing legislation.” Furthermore, it states that “ending government-sponsored promotion of divisive gender ideology is critical to scientific inquiry, public safety, and trust in government.”

Ironically, it is these very actions that have corroded trans people’s trust in the government, stifled scientific research into trans people’s needs, and made trans people feel much less safe. But therein lies the point: when the trump administration says ‘public,’ that doesn’t include trans people. Through this rule, it will attempt to leverage the collective might of the federal government in order to impose that worldview onto this nation as a whole. And in many places, it might work — at least for a time. But they should know: trans people can never really be erased.

Source: Transitics

trump regime ‘drawing up plans’ to stop processing international flights in blue citiesMarkwayne Mullin, DHS secretary, ...
05/30/2026

trump regime ‘drawing up plans’ to stop processing international flights in blue cities

Markwayne Mullin, DHS secretary, said move would come in response to protests outside ICE facility in New Jersey

The trump regime has threatened to stop processing international flights in major cities around the country as a reaction to protests against immigration enforcement.

Markwayne Mullin, the homeland security secretary, said during an interview with Fox News on Tuesday that the administration is “drawing up plans” to take the action, in response to days of clashes at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in New Jersey.

They plan to withdraw immigration processing services at cities with so-called sanctuary laws, which limit local police from cooperating with federal immigration enforcement.

He questioned the provision of federal immigration services at Newark Liberty international airport while Democratic lawmakers were showing up and joining demonstrators in criticizing conditions inside the Delaney Hall ICE facility in Newark.

For the last five days, hundreds of immigrants detained at the privately run Delaney Hall ICE detention facility in Newark have been engaged in a hunger and work strike, demanding improved conditions, medical care and for their immigration cases to move forward. Immigration officials violently clashed with protesters there on Tuesday evening, deploying pepper spray and Tasers. On Monday, US senator Andy Kim was pepper-sprayed by ICE officers.

Sanctuary policies do not prevent ICE operations but rather limit some collaborations between local officials and the federal immigration enforcement agency.

On Wednesday, the hunger strike continued inside the Delaney Hall facility. Adriano Espaillat, a New York congressman, was able to enter the detention center for an oversight visit.

“The conditions, the food conditions are horrible. We feel that they’re not getting medical services. We feel that they’re overcrowded, and they’re denied their fundamental rights,” Espaillat said.

Source: The Guardian

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