newsinsightplus.com 1970s1980s February 22, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityAsiaChinaIndiaUS-Taiwan: Why are so many Congressmen heading for Taipei?Published7 minutes agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, EPAImage caption, Protesters ahead of Nancy Pelosi’s visit in 2022By Rupert Wingfield-HayesBBC News, Taiwan”How would you like it if we started sending official delegations to Honolulu to meet with separatist leaders who want Hawaiian independence from the United States? What would you do if we started selling them weapons?” It might seem like a false equivalence, but this is a line of argument often deployed by China’s legion of armchair warriors, who take to social media to condemn any visit to Taiwan by US government officials – and especially members of the US Congress. China sees self-ruled Taiwan as a breakaway province that will eventually be under Beijing’s control, and so, to these social media users, such visits are an unacceptable provocation and interference in China’s internal affairs.Of course, these visits – like the one being made by Representative Mike Gallagher, head of the US House’s China committee, this week – are viewed very differently in Washington and Taipei, which sees itself as distinct from the Chinese mainland, with its own constitution and democratically-elected leaders. But it does raise the question, what is their purpose? Are they a genuine show of support that helps deter China – or are they publicity stunts that serve to provoke Beijing, and solidify the view that Washington is intent on the permanent separation of Taiwan? The visits are not without consequence. How the US handles its relationships with Beijing and Taipei will do much to determine whether the current tense stalemate across the Taiwan Straits remains that way, or gets a lot worse. “We have come here to reaffirm US support for Taiwan and express solidarity in our shared commitment to democratic values,” said Congressman Ami Bera and Mario Díaz Balart as they wound up a trip here in January. They were the first to make the pilgrimage to Taipei following the 13 January presidential election. Now, the hawkish Rep Gallagher – who told the Guardian last year Beijing was aiming “to render us subordinate, humiliated and irrelevant on the world stage” – arrives with a number of colleagues a month later. It is likely they will not be the last. Since 2016, the number of US congressional delegations crossing the Pacific has increased dramatically. In 2018, for example, six lawmakers made the trip. Last year, 32 visited, according to a tally by Global Taiwan.Image source, EPAImage caption, President Tsai Ing-wen met US Representatives Ami Bera (right) and Mario Díaz-Balart in JanuaryThat trend has been actively encouraged by Taiwan’s current President Tsai Ing-wen, and does not appear to have been discouraged on the US side. Indeed, President Joe Biden has been the most explicit of any US leader yet in his defence of Taiwan – albeit while still continuing a commitment to America’s One China policy.What is the ‘One China’ policy?”It’s important,” says J Michael Cole, a former Canadian intelligence officer and one-time advisor to President Tsai. “The United States keeps saying we have a rock-solid commitment to Taiwan. But you need a public component to that exercise. That’s what rattles Beijing, that’s what gets journalists writing about it.” And unlike the $80m (£63m) grant signed off by Biden in November, these visits also represent a low-cost way for the US to re-assure the people of Taiwan that they do mean what they say.”We have research that shows high-level visits increase people’s confidence in the US-Taiwan relationship,” says Chen Fang-yu, a political scientist at Soochow University in Taipei. Such visits promote a more friendly attitude towards America from those who remain sceptical of whether the US would actually turn up if Taiwan were attacked by China, he explains. However, there are others here who have imbibed conspiracy theories, many of which originate from across the Taiwan Strait, that America is pushing Taipei down the road to war with China, just as conspiracy theorists say it did with Ukraine’s war with Russia. Meanwhile, American congressmen and women have their own, not always selfless, reasons for coming here. The pilgrimage to Taipei is increasingly a way for those on the right to burnish their anti-China credentials to voters back home – although these days, the left appears just as keen to prove their own tough stances when it comes to Beijing. This video can not be playedTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.Media caption, Nancy Pelosi in Taiwan: Democracy a source of strengthThe increased frequency, and unabashed publicity, shows how much has changed between Washington and Beijing.”Before 2016, people thought visits here should be low key,” says Chen Fang-Yu. “They wanted to avoid angering China. But now more and more people realise that no matter what they do, they will anger China.”Taiwan just chose a president China loathes. What now?The Taiwan that China wants is vanishingThe paradise islands caught in the US-China crosshairsTaiwan’s relationship with the US Congress is deep and long. When in 1979, President Jimmy Carter broke relations with Taipei, and recognised Beijing, it was the US Congress that forced him to sign the Taiwan Relations Act. That act is what underpins the relationship with Taipei to this day. It explicitly commits the US to opposing any attempt to change the status quo across the Taiwan Strait by force, and to supplying Taiwan with sufficient weaponry to defend itself against China. In the 1970s, Taiwan was a military dictatorship. Its US allies were Republican. The cold war was still very chilly, and the islands were seen as a bulwark against Communism. Today, anti-communism may still play a small part. But far more important is solidarity with a fellow democracy. Taiwan is no longer a Republican Party cause. In the wake of things like Trump’s trade wars, arguments over Covid’s origins and spy balloons being spotted in the US, support for Taiwan among Americans now spreads through both parties. Added to this, the US also has major national security and economic interests tied to Taiwan – in particular, the semiconductor trade.It all means that, unlike with Ukraine, there a no voices in Congress calling for the US to cut military support for Taiwan. If anything, it is the opposite. Image source, ReutersImage caption, Reaction to the Pelosi visit in Chinese mediaBut that question remains. Do the visits do more harm than good? When Nancy Pelosi came here in the summer of 2022, Beijing responded by firing ballistic missiles over the top of the island for the first time, including over the capital Taipei. Opinion polls taken after the visit showed a majority here thought the visit had damaged Taiwan’s security. It is quite common these days to hear those who specialise in Taiwan studies quoting the old maxim from President Theodore Roosevelt to “speak softly and carry a big stick”. J Michael Cole says that is exactly what the US and Taiwan are doing. He says the US congressional visits might be symbolic, but they are good PR for Taipei and for the members of Congress. With the exception of the Pelosi visit, they also fall below the threshold of what really upsets Beijing. But, says J Michael Cole, what do these visits really mean for US-Taiwan relations? After all, “the really substantive aspect … such as the increasingly high-level exchanges on things like intelligence, like defence, those don’t make the news”. “Those are constructive,” he continues. “And the United States is adamant that those shall not be publicised by Taiwanese government.”Related TopicsChinaTaiwanUS CongressChina-US relationsMore on this storyChina tells US it will ‘never compromise’ on TaiwanPublished10 JanuaryThe Taiwan that China wants is vanishingPublished10 JanuaryWhat’s behind China-Taiwan tensions?Published8 JanuaryTaiwan just chose a president China loathes. What now?Published13 JanuaryUS angers China with high-profile Taiwan visitPublished10 August 2020What is the ‘One China’ policy?Published6 October 2021Top StoriesCommons descends into chaos over Gaza votePublished2 hours agoWatch: Angry scenes as MPs clash over ceasefire vote. VideoWatch: Angry scenes as MPs clash over ceasefire votePublished4 hours agoAnti-terror failures leave public at risk – ex-adviserPublished3 hours agoFeatures’Dad, please don’t go out’: The Gazans killed as Israel freed hostages’Premier League caught my online troll. Should I forgive him?’Watch: Chaos in the Commons over Gaza ceasefire vote. VideoWatch: Chaos in the Commons over Gaza ceasefire voteListen: Newscast – Disorder Disorder in the House of Commons. AudioListen: Newscast – Disorder Disorder in the House of CommonsAttributionSoundsK-Pop acts outsold everyone except Taylor Swift in 2023The strangers who saved each other’s livesWatch Big Keith’s iconic scotch egg scene from The Office. VideoWatch Big Keith’s iconic scotch egg scene from The Office’I was raped more than 100 times by grooming gang’Election poll tracker: How do the parties compare?Elsewhere on the BBCCan Molly keep her life afloat?A moving portrayal of a daughter’s love in the face of her father’s struggleAttributioniPlayerThe Swedish furniture king’s billionaire lifestyleDeconstructing IKEA founder Ingvar Kamprad and his eccentric way of livingAttributionSoundsWhat is it really like to be a monk?’To be a monk is something very vast, very high and very beautiful’AttributioniPlayerHow did a booming computer manufacturer go bust?Commodore computers were huge in the 1980s, so why couldn’t the business adapt and survive?AttributionSoundsMost Read1Commons descends into chaos over Gaza vote2Russia ‘struggling with supply of weapons’ for war3New images show British ship in Red Sea has not sunk4Australian bishop Christopher Saunders charged with rape5The Office actor Ewen MacIntosh dies aged 506Met Police take no further action against Wootton7Prevent failures leave public at risk – ex-adviser8King ‘reduced to tears’ by cancer support messages9Cordon around unexploded WW2 bomb to be extended10UK aid supplies air-dropped into Gaza for first time [ad_1] Representative Mike Gallagher, head of the House’s China committee, is the latest one to make the trip Continue reading
newsinsightplus.com 1970s1980s February 22, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityAsiaChinaIndiaUS-Taiwan: Why are so many Congressmen heading for Taipei?Published7 minutes agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, EPAImage caption, Protesters ahead of Nancy Pelosi’s visit in 2022By Rupert Wingfield-HayesBBC News, Taiwan”How would you like it if we started sending official delegations to Honolulu to meet with separatist leaders who want Hawaiian independence from the United States? What would you do if we started selling them weapons?” It might seem like a false equivalence, but this is a line of argument often deployed by China’s legion of armchair warriors, who take to social media to condemn any visit to Taiwan by US government officials – and especially members of the US Congress. China sees self-ruled Taiwan as a breakaway province that will eventually be under Beijing’s control, and so, to these social media users, such visits are an unacceptable provocation and interference in China’s internal affairs.Of course, these visits – like the one being made by Representative Mike Gallagher, head of the US House’s China committee, this week – are viewed very differently in Washington and Taipei, which sees itself as distinct from the Chinese mainland, with its own constitution and democratically-elected leaders. But it does raise the question, what is their purpose? Are they a genuine show of support that helps deter China – or are they publicity stunts that serve to provoke Beijing, and solidify the view that Washington is intent on the permanent separation of Taiwan? The visits are not without consequence. How the US handles its relationships with Beijing and Taipei will do much to determine whether the current tense stalemate across the Taiwan Straits remains that way, or gets a lot worse. “We have come here to reaffirm US support for Taiwan and express solidarity in our shared commitment to democratic values,” said Congressman Ami Bera and Mario Díaz Balart as they wound up a trip here in January. They were the first to make the pilgrimage to Taipei following the 13 January presidential election. Now, the hawkish Rep Gallagher – who told the Guardian last year Beijing was aiming “to render us subordinate, humiliated and irrelevant on the world stage” – arrives with a number of colleagues a month later. It is likely they will not be the last. Since 2016, the number of US congressional delegations crossing the Pacific has increased dramatically. In 2018, for example, six lawmakers made the trip. Last year, 32 visited, according to a tally by Global Taiwan.Image source, EPAImage caption, President Tsai Ing-wen met US Representatives Ami Bera (right) and Mario Díaz-Balart in JanuaryThat trend has been actively encouraged by Taiwan’s current President Tsai Ing-wen, and does not appear to have been discouraged on the US side. Indeed, President Joe Biden has been the most explicit of any US leader yet in his defence of Taiwan – albeit while still continuing a commitment to America’s One China policy.What is the ‘One China’ policy?”It’s important,” says J Michael Cole, a former Canadian intelligence officer and one-time advisor to President Tsai. “The United States keeps saying we have a rock-solid commitment to Taiwan. But you need a public component to that exercise. That’s what rattles Beijing, that’s what gets journalists writing about it.” And unlike the $80m (£63m) grant signed off by Biden in November, these visits also represent a low-cost way for the US to re-assure the people of Taiwan that they do mean what they say.”We have research that shows high-level visits increase people’s confidence in the US-Taiwan relationship,” says Chen Fang-yu, a political scientist at Soochow University in Taipei. Such visits promote a more friendly attitude towards America from those who remain sceptical of whether the US would actually turn up if Taiwan were attacked by China, he explains. However, there are others here who have imbibed conspiracy theories, many of which originate from across the Taiwan Strait, that America is pushing Taipei down the road to war with China, just as conspiracy theorists say it did with Ukraine’s war with Russia. Meanwhile, American congressmen and women have their own, not always selfless, reasons for coming here. The pilgrimage to Taipei is increasingly a way for those on the right to burnish their anti-China credentials to voters back home – although these days, the left appears just as keen to prove their own tough stances when it comes to Beijing. This video can not be playedTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.Media caption, Nancy Pelosi in Taiwan: Democracy a source of strengthThe increased frequency, and unabashed publicity, shows how much has changed between Washington and Beijing.”Before 2016, people thought visits here should be low key,” says Chen Fang-Yu. “They wanted to avoid angering China. But now more and more people realise that no matter what they do, they will anger China.”Taiwan just chose a president China loathes. What now?The Taiwan that China wants is vanishingThe paradise islands caught in the US-China crosshairsTaiwan’s relationship with the US Congress is deep and long. When in 1979, President Jimmy Carter broke relations with Taipei, and recognised Beijing, it was the US Congress that forced him to sign the Taiwan Relations Act. That act is what underpins the relationship with Taipei to this day. It explicitly commits the US to opposing any attempt to change the status quo across the Taiwan Strait by force, and to supplying Taiwan with sufficient weaponry to defend itself against China. In the 1970s, Taiwan was a military dictatorship. Its US allies were Republican. The cold war was still very chilly, and the islands were seen as a bulwark against Communism. Today, anti-communism may still play a small part. But far more important is solidarity with a fellow democracy. Taiwan is no longer a Republican Party cause. In the wake of things like Trump’s trade wars, arguments over Covid’s origins and spy balloons being spotted in the US, support for Taiwan among Americans now spreads through both parties. Added to this, the US also has major national security and economic interests tied to Taiwan – in particular, the semiconductor trade.It all means that, unlike with Ukraine, there a no voices in Congress calling for the US to cut military support for Taiwan. If anything, it is the opposite. Image source, ReutersImage caption, Reaction to the Pelosi visit in Chinese mediaBut that question remains. Do the visits do more harm than good? When Nancy Pelosi came here in the summer of 2022, Beijing responded by firing ballistic missiles over the top of the island for the first time, including over the capital Taipei. Opinion polls taken after the visit showed a majority here thought the visit had damaged Taiwan’s security. It is quite common these days to hear those who specialise in Taiwan studies quoting the old maxim from President Theodore Roosevelt to “speak softly and carry a big stick”. J Michael Cole says that is exactly what the US and Taiwan are doing. He says the US congressional visits might be symbolic, but they are good PR for Taipei and for the members of Congress. With the exception of the Pelosi visit, they also fall below the threshold of what really upsets Beijing. But, says J Michael Cole, what do these visits really mean for US-Taiwan relations? After all, “the really substantive aspect … such as the increasingly high-level exchanges on things like intelligence, like defence, those don’t make the news”. “Those are constructive,” he continues. “And the United States is adamant that those shall not be publicised by Taiwanese government.”Related TopicsChinaTaiwanUS CongressChina-US relationsMore on this storyChina tells US it will ‘never compromise’ on TaiwanPublished10 JanuaryThe Taiwan that China wants is vanishingPublished10 JanuaryWhat’s behind China-Taiwan tensions?Published8 JanuaryTaiwan just chose a president China loathes. What now?Published13 JanuaryUS angers China with high-profile Taiwan visitPublished10 August 2020What is the ‘One China’ policy?Published6 October 2021Top StoriesCommons descends into chaos over Gaza votePublished2 hours agoWatch: Angry scenes as MPs clash over ceasefire vote. VideoWatch: Angry scenes as MPs clash over ceasefire votePublished4 hours agoAnti-terror failures leave public at risk – ex-adviserPublished3 hours agoFeatures’Dad, please don’t go out’: The Gazans killed as Israel freed hostages’Premier League caught my online troll. Should I forgive him?’Watch: Chaos in the Commons over Gaza ceasefire vote. VideoWatch: Chaos in the Commons over Gaza ceasefire voteListen: Newscast – Disorder Disorder in the House of Commons. AudioListen: Newscast – Disorder Disorder in the House of CommonsAttributionSoundsK-Pop acts outsold everyone except Taylor Swift in 2023The strangers who saved each other’s livesWatch Big Keith’s iconic scotch egg scene from The Office. VideoWatch Big Keith’s iconic scotch egg scene from The Office’I was raped more than 100 times by grooming gang’Election poll tracker: How do the parties compare?Elsewhere on the BBCCan Molly keep her life afloat?A moving portrayal of a daughter’s love in the face of her father’s struggleAttributioniPlayerThe Swedish furniture king’s billionaire lifestyleDeconstructing IKEA founder Ingvar Kamprad and his eccentric way of livingAttributionSoundsWhat is it really like to be a monk?’To be a monk is something very vast, very high and very beautiful’AttributioniPlayerHow did a booming computer manufacturer go bust?Commodore computers were huge in the 1980s, so why couldn’t the business adapt and survive?AttributionSoundsMost Read1Commons descends into chaos over Gaza vote2Russia ‘struggling with supply of weapons’ for war3New images show British ship in Red Sea has not sunk4Australian bishop Christopher Saunders charged with rape5The Office actor Ewen MacIntosh dies aged 506Met Police take no further action against Wootton7Prevent failures leave public at risk – ex-adviser8King ‘reduced to tears’ by cancer support messages9Cordon around unexploded WW2 bomb to be extended10UK aid supplies air-dropped into Gaza for first time [ad_1] Representative Mike Gallagher, head of the House’s China committee, is the latest one to make the trip Continue reading
newsinsightplus.com 2020What2023From February 10, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityWorldAfricaAsiaAustraliaEuropeLatin AmericaMiddle EastUS & CanadaSpain’s LGBT matador: ‘More will come out because of me’Published2 hours agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, Alfredo ArévaloImage caption, Mario Alcalde is Spain’s first openly LGBT matadorBy Jessica ParkerBBC News in western SpainSpain’s first openly LGBT matador believes more bullfighters will come out, after revealing he is pansexual.”There have always been gay people in bullfighting, but they didn’t say anything,” says Mario Alcalde.I meet the 31-year-old on a remote farm near the Portuguese border, where he is having a practice session for one of Spain’s most notable, and notorious, traditions.Dressed in a small black waistcoat and skin-tight grey trousers, he looks every inch the bullfighter.But Mario Alcalde also works full-time as a baggage handler at Madrid-Barajas Airport and lives with his family. Bullfighting only pays big bucks for an elite few.He’s now embracing a boost to his profile after telling Spanish newspaper El Mundo he is pansexual – someone who is attracted to another, regardless of their sex or gender.It was a spontaneous decision to come out, he says. Not even his family knew.”The idea came to me… artists are very spontaneous. It came from my heart.”The matador as an artist is an established idea within the bullfighting community. Supporters see events as a noble contest where man is pitted against beast. Image caption, Bullfighting is associated far more with Spanish conservatism than the contemporary gay sceneBut this is a blood sport, banned in most countries. It has even been outlawed in parts of Spain.Its fierce critics, of which there are many, say it’s a cruel, prolonged and sadistic spectacle in which a bull typically has no chance of survival.It’s a cultural segment of old Spain, where flamboyance meets machismo, and associated far more with Spanish conservatism than the contemporary gay scene.”I thought there was going to be a feeling against it but people are accepting it and in the best way possible,” says Mario.He puts the fact that he’s Spain’s first out LGBT matador down to perceptions that bullfighters came “from the countryside” rather than “more globalised” cities.Now he hopes to establish a “Peña”, or meeting place, for supporters of bullfighting in the heart of Madrid’s LGBT+ community of Chueca.”Perfect!” says Antonio in the Chueca’s main square, right by a metro sign decorated with the LGBT rainbow flag.”I’m glad he has come out. This will take the ‘machos’, as we call them, down a peg or two.”Image caption, Juan and Juan both welcome Mario coming outMarried couple Juan and Juan are also pleased to hear that a matador has come out, but don’t quite see eye to eye on the broader issue.”I’ve been to the bulls as a kid and I like it and I know what the event means,” says Juan.His husband is less of a fan. “I’m not saying they can’t set up a bullfighting gay place, I just don’t think it fits the area. The whole bullfighting thing is very conservative.” His views are echoed by a table of younger LGBT+ people who are far less forgiving of a tradition that has dwindled in popularity.”The issue with bullfighting is that we confuse an animal and lead it to death in a tragic way,” says Maria. “Bullfighting is sustained because it’s a tradition. If this idea were new, I doubt it would be approved.”Image caption, Maria says a bullfighting Peña could be controversial in ChuecaAlongside her, Fran sees something of a contradiction in being a bullfighting supporter as well as being part of the LGBT community, although ultimately “everyone is free to have their own beliefs”.Bullfighting audience numbers have been in decline for decades Despite an an uptick after the Covid pandemic, notably driven by younger people, Spanish culture ministry statistics show that just under 2% of the population went to a bullfight in the 2021-2022 season.Mario Alcalde strongly resists the suggestion that his passion is increasingly irrelevant and out of step with modern sensibilities.”There is no decline,” he says, adding: “Society’s sensibilities do not fit the reality of life.” “Wanting to cover up death is wanting to cover up everything. In order to truly live you have to know that you are going to die.”Image caption, Mario is a full-time airport baggage handler outside of his work in bullfightingFor today’s training, Mario faces a young cow as he holds a pink cape and weaves around the ring before sometimes running to get behind a walled barrier for safety.The animals today aren’t killed but they are injured by a man on horseback who uses what appears to be a type of pike pole.By the end of the session Mario’s trousers are stained by blood that is not his own.Despite repeated challenges about the inherent violence towards animals that bullfighting involves, he’s defiant to the last.”If I had to live another life, I wouldn’t mind being a brave bull and dying like a brave bull.”It’s a staunch, traditional defence of an activity that Mario Alcalde now aims to modernise and diversify, while opponents hope it is a fading shadow of Spain’s past – regardless of a matador’s sexuality.Related TopicsSpainLGBTMore on this storySpain’s bull run tackles sexual assaults head onPublished14 July 2023From coronavirus doctor to Mr Gay WorldPublished27 June 2020What it’s like to be a bearded queen in South KoreaPublished7 January 2023Top StoriesGazans survive on animal feed and rice as food dwindlesPublished2 hours agoPolice to search Thames for Clapham attack suspectPublished45 minutes agoRival parties each claim edge in Pakistan electionPublished2 hours agoFeaturesIsraeli soldier videos from Gaza could breach international law, experts sayThe Ukrainians ‘disappearing’ in Russia’s prisonsDinosaur Island: 40 years of discoveries on Skye’There is no right or wrong way to have alopecia’The Papers: Gaza bloodbath fears and King bonds with FergieSpain’s LGBT matador: ‘More will come out because of me’Is Iceland entering a new volcanic era?An ‘impossible’ country tests its hard-won democracyWhat’s next in Prince Harry’s war against the media?Elsewhere on the BBCIt’s make or break timeAnother set of eager entrepreneurs hope to impress the fearsome panelAttributioniPlayerHow are jelly beans made?Gregg Wallace visits a Dublin factory that makes over ten million of the sweets per day!AttributioniPlayerIs this the greatest Jurassic predator that ever lived?Sir David Attenborough investigates a unique discovery: the skull of a giant, prehistoric sea monsterAttributioniPlayerThe sound effect that became the ultimate movie in-jokeIt’s used in everything from Toy Story to Reservoir Dogs, but what is the Wilhelm Scream?AttributioniPlayerMost Read1Celebrities and the perils of oversharing daily routines2Ex-Fujitsu boss ‘shocked’ by Post Office’s actions3Tory donors and 27-year-old among new peers4Man’s indefinite sentence a ‘serious injustice’5Gaza bloodbath fears and King bonds with Fergie6Mum found under coat in A&E died days later7Cash-strapped clubbers make their nights out count8Police to search Thames for Clapham attack suspect9Spain’s LGBT matador: ‘More will come out because of me’10Is Iceland entering a new volcanic era? [ad_1] Mario Alcalde is said to be Spain’s first openly LGBT matador, after revealing he is pansexual. Continue reading
newsinsightplus.com 2020What2023From February 10, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityWorldAfricaAsiaAustraliaEuropeLatin AmericaMiddle EastUS & CanadaSpain’s LGBT matador: ‘More will come out because of me’Published2 hours agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, Alfredo ArévaloImage caption, Mario Alcalde is Spain’s first openly LGBT matadorBy Jessica ParkerBBC News in western SpainSpain’s first openly LGBT matador believes more bullfighters will come out, after revealing he is pansexual.”There have always been gay people in bullfighting, but they didn’t say anything,” says Mario Alcalde.I meet the 31-year-old on a remote farm near the Portuguese border, where he is having a practice session for one of Spain’s most notable, and notorious, traditions.Dressed in a small black waistcoat and skin-tight grey trousers, he looks every inch the bullfighter.But Mario Alcalde also works full-time as a baggage handler at Madrid-Barajas Airport and lives with his family. Bullfighting only pays big bucks for an elite few.He’s now embracing a boost to his profile after telling Spanish newspaper El Mundo he is pansexual – someone who is attracted to another, regardless of their sex or gender.It was a spontaneous decision to come out, he says. Not even his family knew.”The idea came to me… artists are very spontaneous. It came from my heart.”The matador as an artist is an established idea within the bullfighting community. Supporters see events as a noble contest where man is pitted against beast. Image caption, Bullfighting is associated far more with Spanish conservatism than the contemporary gay sceneBut this is a blood sport, banned in most countries. It has even been outlawed in parts of Spain.Its fierce critics, of which there are many, say it’s a cruel, prolonged and sadistic spectacle in which a bull typically has no chance of survival.It’s a cultural segment of old Spain, where flamboyance meets machismo, and associated far more with Spanish conservatism than the contemporary gay scene.”I thought there was going to be a feeling against it but people are accepting it and in the best way possible,” says Mario.He puts the fact that he’s Spain’s first out LGBT matador down to perceptions that bullfighters came “from the countryside” rather than “more globalised” cities.Now he hopes to establish a “Peña”, or meeting place, for supporters of bullfighting in the heart of Madrid’s LGBT+ community of Chueca.”Perfect!” says Antonio in the Chueca’s main square, right by a metro sign decorated with the LGBT rainbow flag.”I’m glad he has come out. This will take the ‘machos’, as we call them, down a peg or two.”Image caption, Juan and Juan both welcome Mario coming outMarried couple Juan and Juan are also pleased to hear that a matador has come out, but don’t quite see eye to eye on the broader issue.”I’ve been to the bulls as a kid and I like it and I know what the event means,” says Juan.His husband is less of a fan. “I’m not saying they can’t set up a bullfighting gay place, I just don’t think it fits the area. The whole bullfighting thing is very conservative.” His views are echoed by a table of younger LGBT+ people who are far less forgiving of a tradition that has dwindled in popularity.”The issue with bullfighting is that we confuse an animal and lead it to death in a tragic way,” says Maria. “Bullfighting is sustained because it’s a tradition. If this idea were new, I doubt it would be approved.”Image caption, Maria says a bullfighting Peña could be controversial in ChuecaAlongside her, Fran sees something of a contradiction in being a bullfighting supporter as well as being part of the LGBT community, although ultimately “everyone is free to have their own beliefs”.Bullfighting audience numbers have been in decline for decades Despite an an uptick after the Covid pandemic, notably driven by younger people, Spanish culture ministry statistics show that just under 2% of the population went to a bullfight in the 2021-2022 season.Mario Alcalde strongly resists the suggestion that his passion is increasingly irrelevant and out of step with modern sensibilities.”There is no decline,” he says, adding: “Society’s sensibilities do not fit the reality of life.” “Wanting to cover up death is wanting to cover up everything. In order to truly live you have to know that you are going to die.”Image caption, Mario is a full-time airport baggage handler outside of his work in bullfightingFor today’s training, Mario faces a young cow as he holds a pink cape and weaves around the ring before sometimes running to get behind a walled barrier for safety.The animals today aren’t killed but they are injured by a man on horseback who uses what appears to be a type of pike pole.By the end of the session Mario’s trousers are stained by blood that is not his own.Despite repeated challenges about the inherent violence towards animals that bullfighting involves, he’s defiant to the last.”If I had to live another life, I wouldn’t mind being a brave bull and dying like a brave bull.”It’s a staunch, traditional defence of an activity that Mario Alcalde now aims to modernise and diversify, while opponents hope it is a fading shadow of Spain’s past – regardless of a matador’s sexuality.Related TopicsSpainLGBTMore on this storySpain’s bull run tackles sexual assaults head onPublished14 July 2023From coronavirus doctor to Mr Gay WorldPublished27 June 2020What it’s like to be a bearded queen in South KoreaPublished7 January 2023Top StoriesGazans survive on animal feed and rice as food dwindlesPublished2 hours agoPolice to search Thames for Clapham attack suspectPublished45 minutes agoRival parties each claim edge in Pakistan electionPublished2 hours agoFeaturesIsraeli soldier videos from Gaza could breach international law, experts sayThe Ukrainians ‘disappearing’ in Russia’s prisonsDinosaur Island: 40 years of discoveries on Skye’There is no right or wrong way to have alopecia’The Papers: Gaza bloodbath fears and King bonds with FergieSpain’s LGBT matador: ‘More will come out because of me’Is Iceland entering a new volcanic era?An ‘impossible’ country tests its hard-won democracyWhat’s next in Prince Harry’s war against the media?Elsewhere on the BBCIt’s make or break timeAnother set of eager entrepreneurs hope to impress the fearsome panelAttributioniPlayerHow are jelly beans made?Gregg Wallace visits a Dublin factory that makes over ten million of the sweets per day!AttributioniPlayerIs this the greatest Jurassic predator that ever lived?Sir David Attenborough investigates a unique discovery: the skull of a giant, prehistoric sea monsterAttributioniPlayerThe sound effect that became the ultimate movie in-jokeIt’s used in everything from Toy Story to Reservoir Dogs, but what is the Wilhelm Scream?AttributioniPlayerMost Read1Celebrities and the perils of oversharing daily routines2Ex-Fujitsu boss ‘shocked’ by Post Office’s actions3Tory donors and 27-year-old among new peers4Man’s indefinite sentence a ‘serious injustice’5Gaza bloodbath fears and King bonds with Fergie6Mum found under coat in A&E died days later7Cash-strapped clubbers make their nights out count8Police to search Thames for Clapham attack suspect9Spain’s LGBT matador: ‘More will come out because of me’10Is Iceland entering a new volcanic era? [ad_1] Mario Alcalde is said to be Spain’s first openly LGBT matador, after revealing he is pansexual. Continue reading