Asked to Take Down Pride Flag, Wisconsin Couple Sets Up Rainbow Floodlights Instead New neighborhood association rules tell residents they can only fly the U.S. flag, as opposed to others representing sports teams, Black Lives Matter or Pride
Published June 8, 2021 •
Updated 2 hours ago
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After being told to take down their Pride flag, one Wisconsin couple found a clever alternative that caught the internet s attention, the Milwaukee Journal Sentential reported.
According to the newspaper, Memo Fachino and his husband Lance Mier lit up their house with a rainbow of lights after being asked to take down their original Pride flag in accordance with the neighborhood association s new guidelines.
Asked to Take Down Pride Flag, Wisconsin Couple Sets Up Rainbow Floodlights Instead New neighborhood association rules tell residents they can only fly the U.S. flag, as opposed to others representing sports teams, Black Lives Matter or Pride
Published June 8, 2021 •
Updated 2 hours ago
NBC Universal, Inc.
After being told to take down their Pride flag, one Wisconsin couple found a clever alternative that caught the internet s attention, the Milwaukee Journal Sentential reported.
According to the newspaper, Memo Fachino and his husband Lance Mier lit up their house with a rainbow of lights after being asked to take down their original Pride flag in accordance with the neighborhood association s new guidelines.
Memo Fachino and his husband Lance Mier lit up their house with a rainbow of lights after being asked to take down their original Pride flag in accordance with.
McHenry Township Clerk Danielle Aylward paid her taxes in single dollar bills in 2016 as part of a tax protest. She says that sparked her run for McHenry Township Clerk.
Updated 5/4/2021 8:15 AM
For decades, those closest to Danielle Aylward, McHenry Township s clerk, have known she was transgender.
Late last week, Aylward, who is in the process of transitioning from a male to a female and prefers the pronouns she and her, made everyone else aware of how she has long identified to her family and friends by coming out as trans on social media.
Danielle Aylward, who won reelection last month as McHenry Township s clerk while on the ballot as Dan Aylward, became McHenry County s first openly transgender elected official when she came out on Facebook.
While many would call Aylward s decision to come out at 72 as courageous, she credited her late twin, who was also transgender and died by suicide years ago after transitioning from male to female, with far more bravery.