economically. focusing on the economic benefits and the economic entitlements that people should be focused on. you mentioned the supreme court decision, the supreme court decisions are certainly a huge blow to many people. but i see them as a wake up call. all of the recent rulings against gay rights, against affirmative action, against the right to choose, against student loan relief show that we have an activist supreme court that s really intent on stripping all of us of our fundamental american rights. so yes, i m an lgbtq activist, but i m also a black man. and all of these decisions are really stripping away fundamental principles that the court said were deeply embedded in our history and tradition. this is the 14th amendment. i ve been practicing law for 20 years, i went to law school reading these cases. and now these cases, there are new cases that are saying the pillars that we have been relying on constitutionally no
Drag queen Hurricane Kimchi has torn through Seoul's nightlife scene like their meteorological namesake for a decade, part of a burgeoning LGBTQ community fighting for their rights in socially conservative South Korea.Hurricane Kimchi, also known as activist and artist Heezy Yang, said South Korea needs to get used to the idea that LGBTQ people are part of society.
Released video footage of a recent Pride celebration in New York shows a large crowd of trans activists chanting the lines: “We're here; we’re queer; we’re coming for your children.”Glenn and Stu assume these activists don’t mean that literally and are using the crass statement to push back against .
Google-Doodle: Willi Ninja opened the road for black LGBTQ+ representation and acceptance in the 1980s and 1990s. According to Google, the neighborhood he created,
Discover the extraordinary world of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, an order of queer nuns dedicated to activism through the art of drag performances.