untung99.biz

untung99.biz: Dwyane Wade talks moving family out of Florida over antiLGBTQ legislation


Untung99 menawarkan beragam permainan yang menarik, termasuk slot online, poker, roulette, blackjack, dan taruhan olahraga langsung. Dengan koleksi permainan yang lengkap dan terus diperbarui, pemain memiliki banyak pilihan untuk menjaga kegembiraan mereka. Selain itu, Untung99 juga menyediakan bonus dan promosi menarik yang meningkatkan peluang kemenangan dan memberikan nilai tambah kepada pemain.

Berikut adalah artikel atau berita tentang Harian untung99.biz dengan judul untung99.biz: Dwyane Wade talks moving family out of Florida over antiLGBTQ legislation yang telah tayang di untung99.biz terimakasih telah menyimak. Bila ada masukan atau komplain mengenai artikel berikut silahkan hubungi email kami di koresponden@untung99.biz, Terimakasih.

By

Dwyane Wade is opening up about why he and his family moved out of Florida, listing the state’s anti-LGBTQ+ laws as part of the reason for their move.

“That’s another reason why I don’t live in that state,” the former professional basketball player, who spent the vast majority of his 16-year NBA career playing for the Miami Heat, said in a clip from “Headliners” with Rachel Nichols shared by
People. “A lot of people don’t know that. I have to make decisions for my family, not just personal, individual decisions.”

Wade’s daughter Zaya, who turns 16 next month,
came out as transgender in 2020. Since then, she has fully been supported by her dad and his wife Gabrielle Union, both of whom have been outspoken about their support for the LGBTQ+ community.

“I mean, obviously, the taxes is great. Having Wade County is great,” he added. “But my family would not be accepted or feel comfortable there, and so that’s one of the reasons why I don’t live there.”

Chris Delmas/AFP via Getty Images

Actress Gabrielle Union (2R) and her husband former professional basketball player Dwayne Wade pose with daughters Zaya Wade (L) and Kaavia James Union Wade (2L) as they arrive for the “Cheaper by the Dozen” Disney premiere at the El Capitan theatre in Hollywood, Calif., March 16, 2022.

In the wake of such policies, families like Wade’s are either moving from these states or are considering it — though not all are able to for myriad reasons, including the high cost of uprooting a family to move out of state.

“Most families in the U.S. don’t have the financial and job flexibility necessary to move,” John Pachankis, Ph.D. , a clinical psychologist and professor at the Yale School of Public Health, who has studied the mental health impacts on gay and bisexual men who moved from a country with high LGTBQ stigma to one more accepting of them,
told ABC News last year.

“Families with higher income have more ability to move, but when families do move, they likely relinquish the social capital, and possibly even some of the economic capital, that they’ve accumulated in their hometowns.”

According to Pachankis, moving away from states with discriminatory laws and policies can be stressful in the short term “because of the disruptions and uncertainties associated with moving,” however, in the long term, it can be beneficial.

“Our research conducted across 44 countries shows that for gay men who move from homophobic countries to more supportive countries, it takes at least five years before the negative mental health impact of moving from a homophobic country dissipates,” Pachankis said. “But thereafter, our research shows that individuals who move to a more supportive location experience lower odds of depression and suicidality because they are less likely to hide their identities and are less socially isolated.”