Dan Massey (December 26, 1942 – January 28, 2013) was an American LGBT rights/sexual freedom activist, scientist, author, blogger, and fundraiser based in Washington, D.C. He was a co-founder and CEO of VenusPlusX.
A graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University Graduate School, he spent most of his professional life trying to make peoples' lives better through technology. He and his life partner of 35 years, Alison Gardner, were known for their work "revealing to the public a new concept of the intrinsic value of sex and gender expression, of personal erotic freedom, to replace millennia of unreasoned ignorance, fear, and hatred with the true joy of Love." Through his blog and archived papers on VenusPlusX.org, Massey attempted to provide a vision of the values of the New Age from varied perspectives.
On January 28, 2013, Massey died following a brief battle with cancer.
He was a technology development executive, experienced in distributed simulation, artificial intelligence, mathematical linguistics, experimental psychology and metamathematics, all of which informed his views on the nature, expression, and true purpose of the erotic senses.
Massey worked for BBN Technologies in Cambridge, Massachusetts as Chief Engineer from May 1972 to January 1994. He then went on to work for Science Applications International Corporation in Vienna, Virginia as Senior Scientist from January 1994 until his retirement in January 2011.
Massey was a member of the Advisory Council of Woodhull Sexual Freedom Alliance, the Policy Advisory Board of Gender Rights Maryland, and the WikiQueer Global Advisory Board. Gardner remains a member of all three projects.
Professional work
Activism
The Urantia Book
LGBT rights activism
VenusPlusX
See also
External links
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